Investigating movement behavior of invasive Burmese pythons on a shy–bold continuum using individual-based modeling

Burmese pythons are established in the Everglades and are expanding their population in Florida to more urbanized and fragmented habitats. Understanding movement and dispersal behavior contributes to our knowledge of how landscape factors influence the persistence of pythons in Florida's habita...

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Main Authors: Holly E. Mutascio, Shannon E. Pittman, Patrick A. Zollner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-01-01
Series:Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1679007316301116
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spelling doaj-28364545a9b74a8abfcbc6a8a3491d1e2020-12-31T04:41:29ZengElsevierPerspectives in Ecology and Conservation2530-06442017-01-011512531Investigating movement behavior of invasive Burmese pythons on a shy–bold continuum using individual-based modelingHolly E. Mutascio0Shannon E. Pittman1Patrick A. Zollner2Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, Purdue University, West Lafayette, United StatesDepartment of Biology, Davidson College, Davidson, United States; Corresponding author.Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, Purdue University, West Lafayette, United StatesBurmese pythons are established in the Everglades and are expanding their population in Florida to more urbanized and fragmented habitats. Understanding movement and dispersal behavior contributes to our knowledge of how landscape factors influence the persistence of pythons in Florida's habitat. Our goal was to examine personality-dependent dispersal in juvenile Burmese pythons by creating behavioral scenarios of risk-taking behavior on a shy–bold continuum using an individual-based model. We observed that a behaviorally plastic strategy best resembled empirically derived patterns of the Burmese python's expansion from the Everglades into the increasingly urbanized landscapes of Homestead and Miami, Florida. This result is consistent with the notion that animal personalities can be flexible in different situations and that animals must make decisions based on trade-offs while dispersing.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1679007316301116Burmese pythonsIndividual-based modelingInvasion biologyPersonality-dependent dispersalShy–bold continuum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Holly E. Mutascio
Shannon E. Pittman
Patrick A. Zollner
spellingShingle Holly E. Mutascio
Shannon E. Pittman
Patrick A. Zollner
Investigating movement behavior of invasive Burmese pythons on a shy–bold continuum using individual-based modeling
Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation
Burmese pythons
Individual-based modeling
Invasion biology
Personality-dependent dispersal
Shy–bold continuum
author_facet Holly E. Mutascio
Shannon E. Pittman
Patrick A. Zollner
author_sort Holly E. Mutascio
title Investigating movement behavior of invasive Burmese pythons on a shy–bold continuum using individual-based modeling
title_short Investigating movement behavior of invasive Burmese pythons on a shy–bold continuum using individual-based modeling
title_full Investigating movement behavior of invasive Burmese pythons on a shy–bold continuum using individual-based modeling
title_fullStr Investigating movement behavior of invasive Burmese pythons on a shy–bold continuum using individual-based modeling
title_full_unstemmed Investigating movement behavior of invasive Burmese pythons on a shy–bold continuum using individual-based modeling
title_sort investigating movement behavior of invasive burmese pythons on a shy–bold continuum using individual-based modeling
publisher Elsevier
series Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation
issn 2530-0644
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Burmese pythons are established in the Everglades and are expanding their population in Florida to more urbanized and fragmented habitats. Understanding movement and dispersal behavior contributes to our knowledge of how landscape factors influence the persistence of pythons in Florida's habitat. Our goal was to examine personality-dependent dispersal in juvenile Burmese pythons by creating behavioral scenarios of risk-taking behavior on a shy–bold continuum using an individual-based model. We observed that a behaviorally plastic strategy best resembled empirically derived patterns of the Burmese python's expansion from the Everglades into the increasingly urbanized landscapes of Homestead and Miami, Florida. This result is consistent with the notion that animal personalities can be flexible in different situations and that animals must make decisions based on trade-offs while dispersing.
topic Burmese pythons
Individual-based modeling
Invasion biology
Personality-dependent dispersal
Shy–bold continuum
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1679007316301116
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AT patrickazollner investigatingmovementbehaviorofinvasiveburmesepythonsonashyboldcontinuumusingindividualbasedmodeling
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