Simulating multi-scale movement decision-making and learning in a large carnivore using agent-based modelling

2021 ◽  
Vol 452 ◽  
pp. 109568
Author(s):  
Alejandra Zubiria Perez ◽  
Christopher Bone ◽  
Gordon Stenhouse
2017 ◽  
Vol 27 ◽  
pp. 188-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Alho ◽  
B.K. Bhavathrathan ◽  
Monique Stinson ◽  
Raja Gopalakrishnan ◽  
Diem-Trinh Le ◽  
...  

PeerJ ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. e2814 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas J. Habib ◽  
Scott Heckbert ◽  
Jeffrey J. Wilson ◽  
Andrew J. K. Vandenbroeck ◽  
Jerome Cranston ◽  
...  

The science of ecosystem service (ES) mapping has become increasingly sophisticated over the past 20 years, and examples of successfully integrating ES into management decisions at national and sub-national scales have begun to emerge. However, increasing model sophistication and accuracy—and therefore complexity—may trade-off with ease of use and applicability to real-world decision-making contexts, so it is vital to incorporate the lessons learned from implementation efforts into new model development. Using successful implementation efforts for guidance, we developed an integrated ES modelling system to quantify several ecosystem services: forest timber production and carbon storage, water purification, pollination, and biodiversity. The system is designed to facilitate uptake of ES information into land-use decisions through three principal considerations: (1) using relatively straightforward models that can be readily deployed and interpreted without specialized expertise; (2) using an agent-based modelling framework to enable the incorporation of human decision-making directly within the model; and (3) integration among all ES models to simultaneously demonstrate the effects of a single land-use decision on multiple ES. We present an implementation of the model for a major watershed in Alberta, Canada, and highlight the system’s capabilities to assess a suite of ES under future management decisions, including forestry activities under two alternative timber harvest strategies, and through a scenario modelling analysis exploring different intensities of hypothetical agricultural expansion. By using a modular approach, the modelling system can be readily expanded to evaluate additional ecosystem services or management questions of interest in order to guide land-use decisions to achieve socioeconomic and environmental objectives.


Author(s):  
Maria Elena Orduña Alegria ◽  
Niels Schütze ◽  
Ayisha Al Khatri, ◽  
Mialyk Oleksandr ◽  
Jens Grundmann

2018 ◽  
Vol 35 (7) ◽  
pp. 1188-1196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaelle Letort ◽  
Arnau Montagud ◽  
Gautier Stoll ◽  
Randy Heiland ◽  
Emmanuel Barillot ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaelle Letort ◽  
Arnau Montagud ◽  
Gautier Stoll ◽  
Randy Heiland ◽  
Emmanuel Barillot ◽  
...  

AbstractDue to the complexity of biological systems, their heterogeneity, and the internal regulation of each cell and its surrounding, mathematical models that take into account cell signalling, cell population behaviour and the extracellular environment are particularly helpful to understand such complex systems. However, very few of these tools, freely available and computationally efficient, are currently available. To fill this gap, we present here our open-source software, PhysiBoSS, which is built on two available software packages that focus on different scales: intracellular signalling using continuous-time markovian Boolean modelling (MaBoSS) and multicellular behaviour using agent-based modelling (PhysiCell).The multi-scale feature of PhysiBoSS - its agent-based structure and the possibility to integrate any Boolean network to it - provide a flexible and computationally efficient framework to study heterogeneous cell population growth in diverse experimental set-ups. This tool allows one to explore the effect of environmental and genetic alterations of individual cells at the population level, bridging the critical gap from genotype to phenotype. PhysiBoSS thus becomes very useful when studying population response to treatment, mutations effects, cell modes of invasion or isomorphic morphogenesis events.To illustrate potential use of PhysiBoSS, we studied heterogeneous cell fate decisions in response to TNF treatment in a 2-D cell population and in a tumour cell 3-D spheroid. We explored the effect of different treatment regimes and the behaviour and selection of several resistant mutants. We highlighted the importance of spatial information on the population dynamics by considering the effect of competition for resources like oxygen. PhysiBoSS is freely available on GitHub (https://github.com/gletort/PhysiBoSS), and is distributed open source under the BSD 3-clause license. It is compatible with most Unix systems, and a Docker package (https://hub.docker.com/r/gletort/physiboss/) is provided to ease its deployment in other systems.


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