Behavioural Movement Strategies in Cyclic Models
B. Moura, J. Menezes

TL;DR
This study explores how directional movement strategies influence species distribution and diversity in cyclic models, revealing that self-preservation tactics enhance territorial dominance and biodiversity.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized cyclic model incorporating behavioral movement tactics and analyzes their effects on spatial patterns and species diversity through stochastic simulations.
Findings
Self-preservation behavior increases territorial dominance.
Conditioned individuals with long-range perception optimize survival.
Self-defense strategy best preserves biodiversity.
Abstract
The spatial segregation of species is fundamental to ecosystem formation and stability. Behavioural strategies may determine where species are located and how their interactions change the local environment arrangement. In response to stimuli in the environment, individuals may move in a specific direction instead of walking randomly. This behaviour can be innate or learned from experience, and allow the individuals to conquer or the maintain territory, foraging or taking refuge. We study a generalisation of the spatial rock-paper-scissors model where individuals of one out of the species may perform directional movement tactics. Running a series of stochastic simulations, we investigate the effects of the behavioural tactics on the spatial pattern formation and the maintenance of the species diversity. We also explore a more realistic scenario, where not all individuals are conditioned…
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