4.7 Article

Sampling rate and misidentification of Levy and non-Levy movement paths

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 90, Issue 12, Pages 3546-3553

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1890/09-0079.1

Keywords

Levy walk; optimal foraging; power law; random walk; subsampling

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A large number of empirical studies have attributed Levy search patterns to the foraging movements of animals. Typically, this is done by fitting a power-law distribution with an exponent of 1 < mu <= 3 to the observed step lengths. Most studies record the animal's location at equally spaced time intervals, which are sometimes significantly longer than the natural time scale of the animal's movements. The collected data thus represent a subsample of the animal's movement. In this paper, the effect of subsampling on the observed properties of both Levy and non-Levy simulated movement paths is investigated. We find that the apparent properties of the observed movement path can be sensitive to the sampling rate even though Levy search patterns are supposedly scale-independent. We demonstrate that, in certain contexts and dependent on the sampling rate used in observation, it is possible to misidentify a non-Levy movement path as being a Levy path. We also demonstrate that a Levy movement path can be misidentified as a non-Levy path, but this is dependent on the value of l of the original simulated path, with the greatest uncertainty for mu = 2. We discuss the implications of these results in the context of studies of animal movements and foraging behavior.

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