Publication | Closed Access
USING FIRST-PASSAGE TIME IN THE ANALYSIS OF AREA-RESTRICTED SEARCH AND HABITAT SELECTION
563
Citations
30
References
2003
Year
ForagingEngineeringBiogeographyMovement PatternsAvian LocomotionEvolutionary BiologyGeographyMovement EcologySocial SciencesFirst-passage TimeHabitat ManagementSpatial ScaleLandscape ConnectivityPopulation EcologyAnimal BehaviorSpatial EcologyConservation Biology
How animals change their movement patterns in relation to the environment is a central topic in a wide area of ecology, including foraging ecology, habitat selection, and spatial population ecology. To understand the underlying behavioral mechanisms involved, there is a need for methods to measure changes in movement patterns along a pathway through the landscape. We used simulated pathways and satellite tracking of a long-ranging seabird to explore the properties of first-passage time as a measure of search effort along a path. The first-passage time is defined as the time required for an animal to cross a circle with a given radius. It is a measure of how much time an animal uses within a given area. First-passage time is scale dependent, and a plot of variance in first-passage time vs. spatial scale reveals the spatial scale at which the animal concentrates its search effort. By averaging the first-passage time on a geographical grid, it is possible to relate first-passage time to environmental variables and the search pattern of other individuals. Corresponding Editor: G. M. Henebry
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1