Agent-based and continuous models of hopper bands for the Australian plague locust: How resource consumption mediates pulse formation and geometry
Andrew J. Bernoff, Michael Culshaw-Maurer, Rebecca A. Everett, Maryann, E. Hohn, W. Christopher Strickland, Jasper Weinburd

TL;DR
This study models locust hopper bands using agent-based and PDE models to show how resource consumption influences band formation, shape, and speed, aligning with observed field data and emphasizing feeding behavior's role.
Contribution
The paper introduces combined agent-based and PDE models that incorporate resource-dependent locust behavior, providing new insights into hopper band dynamics and their relation to resource availability.
Findings
Resource consumption mediates band shape and speed.
Models reproduce observed density distributions.
Feeding behavior is crucial for accurate modeling.
Abstract
Locusts are significant agricultural pests. Under favorable environmental conditions flightless juveniles may aggregate into coherent, aligned swarms referred to as hopper bands. These bands are often observed as a propagating wave having a dense front with rapidly decreasing density in the wake. A tantalizing and common observation is that these fronts slow and steepen in the presence of green vegetation. This suggests the collective motion of the band is mediated by resource consumption. Our goal is to model and quantify this effect. We focus on the Australian plague locust, for which excellent field and experimental data is available. Exploiting the alignment of locusts in hopper bands, we concentrate solely on the density variation perpendicular to the front. We develop two models in tandem; an agent-based model that tracks the position of individuals and a partial differential…
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