Controlling invasive species with biologically-inspired robots

Giovanni Polverino, Maurizio Porfiri

Research output: Chapter in Book/Conference paperConference paperpeer-review

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Abstract

Robotics is emerging as a promising approach to study animal behavior. Biologically-inspired robots can manipulate the behavior of live animals and are increasingly employed to uncover the underpinnings of sociality and mate choice in the animal realm. But behavioral variation between animals plays a critical role for their ecology and evolution, and ultimately it determines variation in the survival, growth, and reproduction of individuals. While the study of behavioral responses of animals toward their robotic counterparts dominates the literature, it remains largely untested whether the life-history strategies of live animals can be artificially manipulated with biologically-inspired robots. Recently, predator-mimicking robots allowed to successfully study antipredator responses of highly invasive fish in detail, revealing that costs of behavioral alternations induced by robotic predators can impact the health and survival of invaders. The evidence that biologically-inspired robots can undermine the ecological success of invasive animals opens the door to novel experimental analyses at the interface between robotics, ecology, and invasion biology.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the ALIFE 2021: The 2021 Conference on Artificial Life
Place of PublicationUSA
PublisherThe MIT Press
Pages35
Number of pages4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 19 Jul 2021
EventThe 2021 Conference on Artificial Life - University of Chemistry and Technology -Virtual, Prague, Czech Republic
Duration: 19 Jul 202123 Jul 2021
https://alife.org/conference/alife-2021/

Conference

ConferenceThe 2021 Conference on Artificial Life
Abbreviated titleALIFE 2021
Country/TerritoryCzech Republic
CityPrague
Period19/07/2123/07/21
Internet address

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