The evolutionary origins of Lévy walk foraging
暂无分享,去创建一个
Marina E. Wosniack | Marcos C. Santos | Ernesto P. Raposo | Gandhi M. Viswanathan | Marcos G. E. da Luz | G. Viswanathan | M. D. Luz | E. Raposo | M. E. Wosniack
[1] Ana B Sendova-Franks,et al. Ant search strategies after interrupted tandem runs , 2010, Journal of Experimental Biology.
[2] M. Porter,et al. Critical Truths About Power Laws , 2012, Science.
[3] Ken Cheng,et al. Does the Australian desert ant Melophorus bagoti approximate a Lévy search by an intrinsic bi-modal walk? , 2014, Journal of theoretical biology.
[4] Graeme T. Lloyd,et al. The extinction of the dinosaurs , 2015, Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.
[5] M. Naguib,et al. Experimental evidence for inherent Lévy search behaviour in foraging animals , 2015, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[6] S. Benhamou,et al. Ultimate failure of the Lévy Foraging Hypothesis: Two-scale searching strategies outperform scale-free ones even when prey are scarce and cryptic. , 2015, Journal of theoretical biology.
[7] G. Viswanathan,et al. Unveiling a mechanism for species decline in fragmented habitats: fragmentation induced reduction in encounter rates , 2014, Journal of The Royal Society Interface.
[8] M. Ritchie. Scale, Heterogeneity, and the Structure and Diversity of Ecological Communities , 2009 .
[9] Jeffrey R. Lucas,et al. Time Scale and Diet Choice Decisions , 1990 .
[10] Simon Benhamou,et al. Of scales and stationarity in animal movements. , 2014, Ecology letters.
[11] Yukio-Pegio Gunji,et al. Inherent noise appears as a Lévy walk in fish schools , 2015, Scientific Reports.
[12] Andy M. Reynolds,et al. Mussels realize Weierstrassian Lévy walks as composite correlated random walks , 2014, Scientific Reports.
[13] R. Ramli,et al. The Relationships between Morphological Characteristics and Foraging Behavior in Four Selected Species of Shorebirds and Water Birds Utilizing Tropical Mudflats , 2015, TheScientificWorldJournal.
[14] Mark E. J. Newman,et al. Power-Law Distributions in Empirical Data , 2007, SIAM Rev..
[15] Andrew J. J. MacIntosh. At the edge of chaos--error tolerance and the maintenance of Lévy statistics in animal movement: Comment on "Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging" by A.M. Reynolds. , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[16] S. Focardi. Do the albatross Lévy flights below the spandrels of St Mark?: Comment on "Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging" by A.M. Reynolds. , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[17] P. A. P. Moran,et al. The statistical analysis of the Canadian Lynx cycle. , 1953 .
[18] D. Bottjer,et al. Paleoecology of a large Early Cambrian bioturbator , 2000 .
[19] Andy M. Reynolds,et al. Effective leadership in animal groups when no individual has pertinent information about resource locations: How interactions between leaders and followers can result in Lévy walk movement patterns , 2013 .
[20] Bruce T. Milne,et al. Spatial Aggregation and Neutral Models in Fractal Landscapes , 1992, The American Naturalist.
[21] Ernesto P. Raposo,et al. The influence of the environment on Lévy random search efficiency: Fractality and memory effects , 2012 .
[22] Sabrina Fossette,et al. High activity and Lévy searches: jellyfish can search the water column like fish , 2012, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[23] Sergei Petrovskii,et al. Comment on : “ Lévy walks evolve through interaction between movement and environmental complexity ” , 2011 .
[24] Marcos C. Santos,et al. Survival in patchy landscapes: the interplay between dispersal, habitat loss and fragmentation , 2015, Scientific Reports.
[25] Nicolas E. Humphries,et al. Why Lévy Foraging does not need to be 'unshackled' from Optimal Foraging Theory: Comment on "Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging" by A.M. Reynolds. , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[26] Marcos C. Santos,et al. Dynamical robustness of Lévy search strategies. , 2003, Physical review letters.
[27] Kenneth Wilson,et al. Evidence for a pervasive ‘idling-mode’ activity template in flying and pedestrian insects , 2015, Royal Society Open Science.
[28] J. Klafter,et al. Feeding and Swimming Behavior in Grazing Microzooplankton1,2 , 1988 .
[29] D. Boyer. What future for Lévy walks in animal movement research?: Comment on "Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging", by A.M. Reynolds. , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[30] A. Reynolds. Bridging the gulf between correlated random walks and Lévy walks: autocorrelation as a source of Lévy walk movement patterns , 2010, Journal of The Royal Society Interface.
[31] D. K. Schwartz,et al. Interfacial Molecular Searching Using Forager Dynamics. , 2016, Physical review letters.
[32] E W Montroll,et al. Random walks with self-similar clusters. , 1981, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[33] Gil Ariel,et al. Swarming bacteria migrate by Lévy Walk , 2015, Nature Communications.
[34] M. Rietkerk,et al. Spatial vegetation patterns and imminent desertification in Mediterranean arid ecosystems , 2007, Nature.
[35] Andy M. Reynolds,et al. On the origin of bursts and heavy tails in animal dynamics , 2011 .
[36] S. Gould,et al. Punctuated equilibria: the tempo and mode of evolution reconsidered , 1977, Paleobiology.
[37] Jeffrey C. Mogul,et al. Emergent (mis)behavior vs. complex software systems , 2006, EuroSys.
[38] Frederic Bartumeus,et al. Stochastic Optimal Foraging: Tuning Intensive and Extensive Dynamics in Random Searches , 2014, PloS one.
[39] F Bartumeus,et al. Inferring Lévy walks from curved trajectories: A rescaling method. , 2015, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[40] Marina E. Wosniack,et al. A parallel algorithm for random searches , 2015, Comput. Phys. Commun..
[41] D. Naish. The fossil record of bird behaviour , 2014 .
[42] M. Palmer,et al. Fractal geometry: a tool for describing spatial patterns of plant communities , 1988, Vegetatio.
[43] A. M. Edwards,et al. Using likelihood to test for Lévy flight search patterns and for general power-law distributions in nature. , 2008, The Journal of animal ecology.
[44] F. Weissing,et al. How superdiffusion gets arrested: ecological encounters explain shift from Lévy to Brownian movement , 2014, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[45] R. Ricklefs,et al. Darwin's bridge between microevolution and macroevolution , 2009, Nature.
[46] S. Benhamou. HOW MANY ANIMALS REALLY DO THE LÉVY WALK , 2007 .
[47] Ernesto P. Raposo,et al. Can collective searches profit from Lévy walk strategies? , 2009 .
[48] Frederic Bartumeus,et al. Foraging success under uncertainty: search tradeoffs and optimal space use. , 2016, Ecology letters.
[49] B. Danielson. Communities in a Landscape: The Influence of Habitat Heterogeneity on the Interactions between Species , 1991, The American Naturalist.
[50] Nicolas E. Humphries,et al. Lévy flight and Brownian search patterns of a free-ranging predator reflect different prey field characteristics. , 2012, The Journal of animal ecology.
[51] Frederic Bartumeus,et al. Behavioural ecology cannot turn its back on Lévy walk research: Comment on "Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging" by A.M. Reynolds. , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[52] R. Macarthur,et al. On Optimal Use of a Patchy Environment , 1966, The American Naturalist.
[53] C. Newman,et al. Neo-darwinian evolution implies punctuated equilibria , 1985, Nature.
[54] G. Viswanathan,et al. Conditions under which a superdiffusive random-search strategy is necessary. , 2012, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[55] Norman L Carreck,et al. Honeybees perform optimal scale-free searching flights when attempting to locate a food source , 2007, Journal of Experimental Biology.
[56] A. M. Edwards,et al. Revisiting Lévy flight search patterns of wandering albatrosses, bumblebees and deer , 2007, Nature.
[57] Nicolas E. Humphries,et al. Hierarchical random walks in trace fossils and the origin of optimal search behavior , 2014, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[58] Hazel R. Parry,et al. Optimal Lévy-flight foraging in a finite landscape , 2014, Journal of The Royal Society Interface.
[59] Nicolas E. Humphries,et al. Scaling laws of marine predator search behaviour , 2008, Nature.
[60] G M Viswanathan,et al. And yet it optimizes: Comment on "Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging" by A.M. Reynolds. , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[61] A. King,et al. Extinction Thresholds for Species in Fractal Landscapes , 1999 .
[62] Marcos Gomes Eleuterio da Luz,et al. Subjective expectation of rewards can change the behavior of smart but impatient foragers , 2016, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[63] A. M. Edwards,et al. Incorrect Likelihood Methods Were Used to Infer Scaling Laws of Marine Predator Search Behaviour , 2012, PloS one.
[64] Frederic Bartumeus,et al. Fractal reorientation clocks: Linking animal behavior to statistical patterns of search , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[65] Mark Newman,et al. Complex Systems Theory and Evolution , 2002 .
[66] H. Larralde,et al. Lévy walk patterns in the foraging movements of spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi) , 2003, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
[67] A. Reynolds. Venturing beyond the Lévy flight foraging hypothesis: Reply to comments on "Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging". , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[68] A M Reynolds,et al. Lévy flight movement patterns in marine predators may derive from turbulence cues , 2014, Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences.
[69] M. Ribeiro,et al. Effects of Land Cover on the Movement of Frugivorous Birds in a Heterogeneous Landscape , 2016, PloS one.
[70] Frederic Bartumeus,et al. LÉVY PROCESSES IN ANIMAL MOVEMENT: AN EVOLUTIONARY HYPOTHESIS , 2007 .
[71] S. Schreiber,et al. Rapid evolution slows extinctions in food webs , 2017, bioRxiv.
[72] H. B. Wilson,et al. Deterministic Limits to Stochastic Spatial Models of Natural Enemies , 2002, The American Naturalist.
[73] Andy M. Reynolds,et al. Beating the Odds in the Aerial Lottery: Passive Dispersers Select Conditions at Takeoff That Maximize Their Expected Fitness on Landing , 2013, The American Naturalist.
[74] F. Marlowe,et al. Evidence of Lévy walk foraging patterns in human hunter–gatherers , 2013, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[75] A. M. Edwards,et al. Overturning conclusions of Lévy flight movement patterns by fishing boats and foraging animals. , 2011, Ecology.
[76] M. Plank,et al. Optimal foraging: Lévy pattern or process? , 2008, Journal of The Royal Society Interface.
[77] M. West-Eberhard. Developmental plasticity and evolution , 2003 .
[78] Andy M. Reynolds,et al. Lévy flight patterns are predicted to be an emergent property of a bumblebees’ foraging strategy , 2009, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
[79] Nicolas E. Humphries,et al. Environmental context explains Lévy and Brownian movement patterns of marine predators , 2010, Nature.
[80] A. Reynolds,et al. Pelagic seabird flight patterns are consistent with a reliance on olfactory maps for oceanic navigation , 2015, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[81] Brigitte Tenhumberg,et al. Composite random search strategies based on non-directional sensory cues , 2013, 1306.5048.
[82] F. Weissing,et al. Lévy Walks Evolve Through Interaction Between Movement and Environmental Complexity , 2011, Science.
[83] Todd M. Scanlon,et al. Positive feedbacks promote power-law clustering of Kalahari vegetation , 2007, Nature.
[84] P. Hull,et al. Life in the Aftermath of Mass Extinctions , 2015, Current Biology.
[85] Andrew M. Simons,et al. The continuity of microevolution and macroevolution , 2002 .
[86] R. Friedrich,et al. Continuous-time multidimensional Markovian description of Lévy walks. , 2009, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[87] Nicholas T. Ouellette,et al. Swarm dynamics may give rise to Lévy flights , 2016, Scientific Reports.
[88] Frederic Bartumeus,et al. The Effects of Spatially Heterogeneous Prey Distributions on Detection Patterns in Foraging Seabirds , 2011, PloS one.
[89] Stanley,et al. Stochastic process with ultraslow convergence to a Gaussian: The truncated Lévy flight. , 1994, Physical review letters.
[90] H. Stanley,et al. Optimizing the success of random searches , 1999, Nature.
[91] Alan Hastings,et al. Emergent long-range synchronization of oscillating ecological populations without external forcing described by Ising universality , 2015, Nature Communications.
[92] A. Reynolds. Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging. , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[93] Lévy patterns in seabirds are multifaceted describing both spatial and temporal patterning , 2016, Frontiers in Zoology.
[94] R. Ydenberg,et al. Interactions between rate processes with different timescales explain counterintuitive foraging patterns of arctic wintering eiders , 2010, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[95] Masato S. Abe,et al. Lévy Walks Suboptimal under Predation Risk , 2015, PLoS Comput. Biol..
[96] Daniel Campos,et al. Stochastic Foundations in Movement Ecology , 2014 .
[97] L. R. da Silva,et al. Search dynamics at the edge of extinction: Anomalous diffusion as a critical survival state , 2007 .
[98] Gandhi M. Viswanathan. Improvements in the statistical approach to random Levy flight searches M.G.E. da Luz, S.V. Buldyrev, S. Havlin, E.P. Raposo, H.E. Stanley, , 2001 .
[99] A. King,et al. Dispersal success on fractal landscapes: a consequence of lacunarity thresholds , 1999, Landscape Ecology.
[100] Mark S. Boyce,et al. Quantifying patch distribution at multiple spatial scales: Applications to wildlife-habitat models , 2005, Landscape Ecology.
[101] D M Raup,et al. Periodic extinction of families and genera. , 1986, Science.
[102] K. Cheng. Answer (in part) blowing in the wind: Comment on "Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging" by A. Reynolds. , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[103] Jonathan W Pitchford,et al. Evolutionary optimality in stochastic search problems , 2010, Journal of The Royal Society Interface.
[104] Lars Chittka,et al. Signatures of a globally optimal searching strategy in the three-dimensional foraging flights of bumblebees , 2016, Scientific Reports.
[105] G. Viswanathan,et al. Optimal random searches of revisitable targets: Crossover from superdiffusive to ballistic random walks , 2004 .
[106] M. Hoddle. The effect of prey species and environmental complexity on the functional response of Franklinothrips orizabensis: a test of the fractal foraging model , 2003 .
[107] David W. Sims,et al. A new approach for objective identification of turns and steps in organism movement data relevant to random walk modelling , 2013 .
[108] Sergey V. Buldyrev,et al. Lévy flights search patterns of biological organisms , 2001 .
[109] G. Viswanathan,et al. The influence of turning angles on the success of non-oriented animal searches. , 2008, Journal of Theoretical Biology.
[110] Sepideh Bazazi,et al. Intermittent Motion in Desert Locusts: Behavioural Complexity in Simple Environments , 2012, PLoS Comput. Biol..
[111] G. Viswanathan,et al. Necessary criterion for distinguishing true superdiffusion from correlated random walk processes. , 2005, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[112] F. Bartumeus,et al. Helical Lévy walks: Adjusting searching statistics to resource availability in microzooplankton , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[113] G. Mayr. The origins of crown group birds: molecules and fossils , 2014 .
[114] David A. Bohan,et al. Avoidance of conspecific odour by carabid beetles: a mechanism for the emergence of scale-free searching patterns , 2008, Animal Behaviour.
[115] Stefano Focardi,et al. Adaptive Lévy Walks in Foraging Fallow Deer , 2009, PloS one.
[116] F. van Langevelde,et al. Patch density determines movement patterns and foraging efficiency of large herbivores , 2007 .
[117] Michael J Plank,et al. Sampling rate and misidentification of Lévy and non-Lévy movement paths. , 2009, Ecology.
[118] Juan Luis Cabrera,et al. A neural coding scheme reproducing foraging trajectories , 2015, Scientific Reports.
[119] Ehud Meron,et al. Woody Species as Landscape Modulators and Their Effect on Biodiversity Patterns , 2008 .
[120] T. M. Anderson,et al. Scale-dependent relationships between the spatial distribution of a limiting resource and plant species diversity in an African grassland ecosystem , 2004, Oecologia.
[121] Guy Woodward,et al. Biodiversity, species interactions and ecological networks in a fragmented world , 2012 .
[122] A. Reynolds. Signatures of active and passive optimized Lévy searching in jellyfish , 2014, Journal of The Royal Society Interface.
[123] G M Viswanathan,et al. Robustness of optimal random searches in fragmented environments. , 2015, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[124] M. E. Wosniack,et al. Efficient search of multiple types of targets. , 2015, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[125] Kimberly A. With,et al. Habitat area trumps fragmentation effects on arthropods in an experimental landscape system , 2011, Landscape Ecology.
[126] Joel s. Brown,et al. Foraging : behavior and ecology , 2007 .
[127] H. Stanley,et al. The Physics of Foraging: An Introduction to Random Searches and Biological Encounters , 2011 .
[128] A. Reynolds. Olfactory search behaviour in the wandering albatross is predicted to give rise to Lévy flight movement patterns , 2012, Animal Behaviour.
[129] A M Reynolds,et al. Selection pressures give composite correlated random walks Lévy walk characteristics. , 2013, Journal of theoretical biology.
[130] P. Fauchald,et al. Foraging in a Hierarchical Patch System , 1999, The American Naturalist.
[131] M. Levandowsky,et al. Swimming behavior and chemosensory responses in the protistan microzooplankton as a function of the hydrodynamic regime , 1988 .
[132] Alan C. Kamil,et al. Foraging behavior: ecological, ethological, and psychological approaches , 1980 .
[133] Marshall G. Hussain Shuler,et al. Rationalizing spatial exploration patterns of wild animals and humans through a temporal discounting framework , 2016, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[134] G. Viswanathan,et al. The universality class of random searches in critically scarce environments , 2012 .
[135] Nicolas E. Humphries,et al. Foraging success of biological Lévy flights recorded in situ , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[136] H E Stanley,et al. Average time spent by Lévy flights and walks on an interval with absorbing boundaries. , 2001, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[137] A. Barbosa,et al. EVOLUTION OF FORAGING STRATEGIES IN SHOREBIRDS: AN ECOMORPHOLOGICAL APPROACH , 1999 .
[138] O. Miramontes. Divorcing physics from biology? Optimal foraging and Lévy flights: Comment on "Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging" by A.M. Reynolds. , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[139] L. Schulman,et al. Punctuated equilibrium as an emergent process and its modified thermodynamic characterization. , 2017, Journal of theoretical biology.
[140] Clifford T. Brown,et al. Lévy Flights in Dobe Ju/’hoansi Foraging Patterns , 2007 .
[141] Geir Huse,et al. Linking behavioural ecology and oceanography: larval behaviour determines growth, mortality and dispersal , 2007 .
[142] Eli E. Goldwyn,et al. The roles of the Moran effect and dispersal in synchronizing oscillating populations. , 2011, Journal of theoretical biology.
[143] Daniel Campos,et al. Stochastic Foundations in Movement Ecology: Anomalous Diffusion, Front Propagation and Random Searches , 2013 .
[144] Daniel Fortin,et al. A spatial theory for characterizing predator–multiprey interactions in heterogeneous landscapes , 2015, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[145] A M Reynolds,et al. Animals That Randomly Reorient at Cues Left by Correlated Random Walkers Do the Lévy Walk , 2010, The American Naturalist.
[146] Stefano Focardi,et al. The Lévy flight foraging hypothesis in a pelagic seabird. , 2014, The Journal of animal ecology.
[147] Andy M. Reynolds,et al. Balancing the competing demands of harvesting and safety from predation: Lévy walk searches outperform composite Brownian walk searches but only when foraging under the risk of predation , 2010 .
[148] Frederic Bartumeus,et al. First-passage times in multiscale random walks: The impact of movement scales on search efficiency. , 2015, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[149] M. Ritchie. Scale-dependent foraging and patch choice in fractal environments , 2004, Evolutionary Ecology.
[150] M. Shlesinger,et al. Lévy Walks Versus Lévy Flights , 1986 .
[151] J. A. Kitchell. Deep-sea foraging pathways: an analysis of randomness and resource exploitation , 1979, Paleobiology.
[152] G. Pyke. Optimal Foraging Theory: A Critical Review , 1984 .
[153] George L. Hunt,et al. Foraging in a fractal environment: Spatial patterns in a marine predator-prey system , 1992, Landscape Ecology.
[154] R. Solé,et al. Self-similarity of extinction statistics in the fossil record , 1997, Nature.
[155] A M Reynolds,et al. Distinguishing between Lévy walks and strong alternative models. , 2012, Ecology.
[156] R. Menzel,et al. Displaced honey bees perform optimal scale-free search flights. , 2007, Ecology.
[157] F. Bartumeus. Behavioral intermittence, Lévy patterns, and randomness in animal movement , 2009 .
[158] G. Pyke. Understanding movements of organisms: it's time to abandon the Lévy foraging hypothesis , 2015 .
[159] B. Lieberman,et al. Considering the Case for Biodiversity Cycles: Re-Examining the Evidence for Periodicity in the Fossil Record , 2007, PloS one.
[160] Injong Rhee,et al. On the levy-walk nature of human mobility , 2011, TNET.
[161] A. Reynolds,et al. Signatures of chaos in animal search patterns , 2016, Scientific Reports.
[162] P. Hänggi,et al. Markovian embedding of non-Markovian superdiffusion. , 2009, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[163] Nicolas E. Humphries,et al. Optimal foraging strategies: Lévy walks balance searching and patch exploitation under a very broad range of conditions. , 2014, Journal of theoretical biology.
[164] Kjell Einar Erikstad,et al. SCALE‐DEPENDENT PREDATOR–PREY INTERACTIONS: THE HIERARCHICAL SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF SEABIRDS AND PREY , 2000 .
[165] A M Reynolds,et al. The Lévy flight paradigm: random search patterns and mechanisms. , 2009, Ecology.
[166] Frederic Bartumeus,et al. How Landscape Heterogeneity Frames Optimal Diffusivity in Searching Processes , 2011, PLoS Comput. Biol..
[167] D. W. Sims. Intrinsic Lévy behaviour in organisms--searching for a mechanism: Comment on "Liberating Lévy walk research from the shackles of optimal foraging" by A.M. Reynolds. , 2015, Physics of life reviews.
[168] Germinal Cocho,et al. Scale-free foraging by primates emerges from their interaction with a complex environment , 2006, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[169] Monique de Jager,et al. Response to Comment on “Lévy Walks Evolve Through Interaction Between Movement and Environmental Complexity” , 2012, Science.