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      The effects of animal personality on the ideal free distribution.

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          Abstract

          The ideal free distribution (IFD) has been used to predict the distribution of foraging animals in a wide variety of systems. However, its predictions do not always match observed distributions of foraging animals. Instead, we often observe that there are more consumers than predicted in low-quality patches and fewer consumers than predicted in high-quality patches (i.e. undermatching). We examine the possibility that animal personality is one explanation for this undermatching. We first conducted a literature search to determine how commonly studies document the personality distribution of populations. Second, we created a simple individual-based model to conceptually demonstrate why knowing the distribution of personalities is important for studies of populations of foragers in context of the IFD. Third, we present a specific example where we calculate the added time to reach the IFD for a population of mud crabs that has a considerable number of individuals with relatively inactive personalities. We suggest that animal personality, particularly the prevalence of inactive personality types, may inhibit the ability of a population to track changes in habitat quality, therefore leading to undermatching of the IFD. This may weaken the IFD as a predictive model moving forward.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Proc Biol Sci
          Proceedings. Biological sciences
          The Royal Society
          1471-2954
          0962-8452
          September 09 2020
          : 287
          : 1934
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Biology, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602, USA.
          Article
          10.1098/rspb.2020.1095
          7542775
          32873202
          f1101035-b7c4-4e98-b464-ad81ad86d535
          History

          Panopeus herbstii,agent-based modelling,behavioural types,habitat fragmentation,patch quality,spatial distribution

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