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Analysis of simulated trap counts arising from correlated and biased random walks.pdf (8.52 MB)

Analysis of simulated trap counts arising from correlated and biased random walks

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-09-16, 09:34 authored by Omar Alqubori, Sergei Petrovskii
Traps are routinely used in insect ecology, conservation, and pest control, but the understanding of trap counts remains limited. A well developed theory only exists for non-baited traps (e.g. pitfall traps) and the simplest animal movement modes, such as Brownian motion, but not for more complex or realistic situations. In particular, important questions as to how the trap counts may differ in case of a baited trap and what its effect can be on the population distribution in the domain where the trap is installed are largely open. In order to bridge this gap in our knowledge, here we use straightforward yet powerful simulation framework of individual-based modelling. A baited trap has a strong effect on the animal movement pattern changing it from the Correlated Random Walk to the Biased Random Walk. This, in turn, is shown to have a dramatic effect on the trap counts. We show that a baited trap can introduce strong heterogeneity into the spatial population distribution, hence resulting in spatiotemporal pattern formation. We also consider a system of multiple traps and show that the trap efficiency can decrease if the traps are installed close to each other.

Funding

MEFA: Mapping and Enabling Future Airspace

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

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Saudi Embassy in the form of a full PhD scholarship

History

Author affiliation

School of Mathematics & Actuarial Science, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Ecological Modelling

Volume

470

Publisher

ELSEVIER

issn

0304-3800

eissn

1872-7026

Acceptance date

2022-05-05

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-09-16

Language

English