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Multiscale models for movement in oriented environments and their application to hilltopping in butterflies
Authors
CS Patlak
EA Codling
+46 more
EA Codling
ET Cant
FM Jiggins
G Peer
G Pe’er
G Pe’er
HG Othmer
HG Othmer
HW McKenzie
I Hanski
J Alcock
J Dover
J Weickert
JA Scott
JA Scott
JA Scott
JF Baughman
JF Baughman
JG Kingsolver
JG Skellam
JJ Hellmann
Kevin J. Painter
KJ Painter
KJ Painter
KV Mardia
MD Bowers
O Shields
P Berens
P Moorcroft
P Turchin
P Turchin
PM Kareiva
PO Wickman
PR Ehrlich
PR Ehrlich
PR Ehrlich
R Erban
R Weiner
RL Rutowski
SM Tomkiewicz
SP Courtney
T Hillen
T Hillen
T Hillen
T Hillen
Y Iwasa
Publication date
1 January 2014
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
Hilltopping butterflies direct their movement in response to topography, facilitating mating encounters via accumulation at summits. In this paper, we take hilltopping as a case study to explore the impact of complex orienteering cues on population dynamics. The modelling employs a standard multiscale framework, in which an individual's movement path is described as a stochastic 'velocity-jump' process and scaling applied to generate a macroscopic model capable of simulating large populations in landscapes. In this manner, the terms and parameters of the macroscopic model directly relate to statistical inputs of the individual-level model (mean speeds, turning rates and turning distributions). Applied to hilltopping in butterflies, we demonstrate how hilltopping acts to aggregate populations at summits, optimising mating for low-density species. However, for abundant populations, hilltopping is not only less effective but also possibly disadvantageous, with hilltopping males recording a lower mating rate than their non-hilltopping competitors. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht
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