Movement, Disease and Patch Exploitation in Nesting Agent Groups

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Abstract

Animal relocation data has recently become considerably more ubiquitous, finely structured (collection frequencies measured in minutes) and co-variate rich (physiology of individuals, environmental and landscape information, and accelerometer data). To better understand the impacts of ecological interactions, individual movement and disease on global change ecology, including wildlife management and conservation, it is important to have simulators that will provide relatively simple demographic, movement, and epidemiology models against which to compare patterns observed in empirical systems. Here we describe a simulator that accounts for the influence of consumer-resource interactions, existence of social groups anchored around a central location, territoriality, group-switching behavior, and disease dynamics on population size. We use this simulator to develop new and reinforce existing results and point out areas for future study.

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Getz, W. M., Tallam, K., & Salter, R. (2020). Movement, Disease and Patch Exploitation in Nesting Agent Groups. In Proceedings of the 2020 Spring Simulation Conference, SpringSim 2020. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. https://doi.org/10.22360/SpringSim.2020.MSM.001

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