Mathematicians develop theory
which helps to unravel long-standing mysteries of animal movement
Date: October 30, 2017
Source: University of Leicester
Mathematicians from the
University of Leicester have developed a theory which explains how small
animals, such as bats, insects and birds, adjust their movement behaviour based
on cues within their environment.
In a paper published
in Scientific Reports, the researchers propose a unified theory of animal
movement that relates the movement pattern to an animal's biological traits
such as its mass and body shape and to the properties of the environment.
The theory shows how different
movement patterns may arise naturally from the interplay between an animal's
force, the environmental drag, and an animal's behavioural response to the
environmental cues. The cues include information about an animal's movement
environment, in particular the information about the location of food sources,
predators and mating partners.
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