Abstract
The evidence for dispersal activity among soil-living invertebrates comes mainly from observations of their movement on artificial substrates or of colonisation of defaunated soils in the field. In an attempt to elucidate the dispersal pattern of soil collembolans in the presence of conspecifics, statistical analyses were undertaken to describe and simulate the movement of groups of Onychiurus armatus released in trays of homogeneous soil. A chi(2) test was used to reject the null hypothesis that individuals moved independently of each other and uniformly in all directions. The mean radial distance moved (1-2 cm day(-1)) and the radial standard deviation varied temporally and with the density of conspecifics. To capture the interaction between the moving individuals, four dispersal models (pure diffusion, diffusion with drift interaction, drift interaction and synchronised diffusion, and drift interaction and behavioural mood), were formulated as stochastic differential equations. The parameters of the models were estimated by minimising the deviance between the observed replicates and replicates that were simulated using the models. The dynamics of movement were best described by modelling the drift interaction as dependent on whether individuals were in a social or an asocial mood.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 97-113 |
Journal | Theoretical Population Biology |
Volume | 61 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2002 |
Subject classification (UKÄ)
- Probability Theory and Statistics
- Ecology
Free keywords
- Animal
- Animal Migration
- Chi-Square Distribution
- Statistical
- Models
- Movement
- Oligochaeta
- Social Behavior
- Soil
- Stochastic Processes
- Support
- Non-U.S. Gov't
- Sweden