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Behavioral strategies and the spatial pattern formation of nesting

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

Nesting in dense aggregations is common in central place foragers, such as group-living birds and insects. Both environmental heterogeneity and behavioral interactions are known to induce clustering of nests, but their relative importance remains unclear. We developed an individual-based model that simulated the spatial organization of nest building in a gregarious digger wasp, Bembix rostrata. This process-based model integrates environmental suitability, as derived from a microhabitat model, and relevant behavioral mechanisms related to local site fidelity and conspecific attraction. The drivers behind the nesting were determined by means of inverse modeling in which the emerging spatial and network patterns from simulations were compared with those observed in the field. Models with individual differences in behavior that include the simultaneous effect of a weak environmental cue and strong behavioral mechanisms yielded the best fit to the field data. The nest pattern formation of a central place foraging insect cannot be considered as the sum of environmental and behavioral mechanisms. We demonstrate the use of inverse modeling to understand complex processes that underlie nest aggregation in nature.
Tijdschrift: AMERICAN NATURALIST
ISSN: 1537-5323
Issue: 1
Volume: 199
Pagina's: E15 - E27
Jaar van publicatie:2022
Toegankelijkheid:Open