Advancing research on animal-transported subsidies by integrating animal movement and ecosystem modelling

J Anim Ecol. 2017 Sep;86(5):987-997. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12711. Epub 2017 Jul 10.

Abstract

Connections between ecosystems via animals (active subsidies) support ecosystem services and contribute to numerous ecological effects. Thus, the ability to predict the spatial distribution of active subsidies would be useful for ecology and conservation. Previous work modelling active subsidies focused on implicit space or static distributions, which treat passive and active subsidies similarly. Active subsidies are fundamentally different from passive subsidies, because animals can respond to the process of subsidy deposition and ecosystem changes caused by subsidy deposition. We propose addressing this disparity by integrating animal movement and ecosystem ecology to advance active subsidy investigations, make more accurate predictions of subsidy spatial distributions, and enable a mechanistic understanding of subsidy spatial distributions. We review selected quantitative techniques that could be used to accomplish integration and lead to novel insights. The ultimate objective for these types of studies is predictions of subsidy spatial distributions from characteristics of the subsidy and the movement strategy employed by animals that transport subsidies. These advances will be critical in informing the management of ecosystem services, species conservation and ecosystem degradation related to active subsidies.

Keywords: animal behaviour; contaminants; ecosystem ecology; ecosystem services; movement strategy; spatial subsidies.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animal Distribution*
  • Animals
  • Ecology*
  • Ecosystem*
  • Movement