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Radiotelemetry reveals differences in individual movement patterns between outbreak and non-outbreak Mormon cricket populations
Authors:Patrick D. Lorch   Gregory A. Sword  Darryl T. Gwynne   Gerald L. Anderson
Affiliation:Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, U.S.A.,;Northern Plains Agricultural Research Laboratory, United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Sidney, Montana, U.S.A. and;Biology Department, University of Toronto at Mississauga, Canada
Abstract:Abstract.  1. Outbreaks of insect pest populations are common and can have devastating effects on natural communities and on agriculture. Little is known about the causes of these outbreaks or the causes of en masse migrations during outbreaks.
2. Flightless Mormon crickets ( Anabrus simplex ) were the focus of this study. They are a katydid species that forms large, dense, mobile groups (migratory bands) during outbreak periods, eating vegetation in their path.
3. Radiotelemetric methods were used to measure differences in movement rate and directionality in outbreak and non-outbreak populations, testing the hypothesis that these populations differ in their travel rate and consistency of direction.
4. Daily individual movement in outbreak populations differs substantially from non-outbreak populations that are at much lower density. In addition to large differences in distances travelled (1.6 km as compared with 1 m) and rates of travel, there is evidence for collective movement among individual Mormon crickets travelling in migratory bands.
5. These data suggest that the direction of group movement may be influenced by local environmental conditions such as wind direction and movement of nearby band members. This work forms the basis for ongoing work testing hypotheses about mass migrations in outbreak populations.
Keywords:Collective movement    insect migration    marching    radio tracking
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