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Fig. 5 | Movement Ecology

Fig. 5

From: Advances in biologging can identify nuanced energetic costs and gains in predators

Fig. 5

Infographic contrasting the energetic costs and gains between a social group of cooperative hunters and a solitary predator, incorporating energetic landscape and social network concepts. Sensor data on animal location and energetics can be computed into energy landscapes, which can in turn influence prey selection and encounter rates. The colour gradients here represent hypothetical energetic landscapes, where movement costs vary across the habitat in question. Solid black lines indicate interactions between social conspecifics, while dashed lines indicate directions of interest to predators due to prey presence

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