Ok I have been seeing this pattern for a while and I thought I would share it. Often when there are walls 300+ coins i see the same number of coins spaced an even distance apart. A good example of this right now are the 1.0 BTC sells from 6.492 to 6.498.
It is my belief that the bots are using these as warning indicators to cancel the sell walls. This is how false walls are put up and right now it is on the sell side which means someone is trying to drive the price down without selling at the low price. Someone is trying to buy bitcoin so we should take down those walls ASAP!
It's an application of an old technique. Even without using a bot one can use some variations of it with certain US stock brokerages that implement conditional orders. One simplistic example could be if a limit order to buy 1 unit at price X is executed, submit another limit order to buy 5 units at X+K1, 10 at X+K2, etc, finally selling 1000 units at price X+Kn; try to start a spike or rally and then sell into it. It's a crappy and trivial example, but it illustrates the idea. More sophisticated schemes using feedback to look for responses and target orders chasing the movement can be implemented pretty easily these days using http and scripting tools like Python.
I recall in the late 90s watching yoyos at stock daytrading operations in the US signal each other using orders with strange prices at odd lot sizes. It was ridiculously obvious when after hours trading was introduced as the number of participants would often be so small that one could pretty much look at the action on Level II quotes and see who was playing ping pong with who. It was also obvious to the US SEC, who took action against individuals and DT operations who were playing these games in attempts to manipulate prices.
The naïve and unregulated world of bitcoin provides an opportunity to blow the dust off practices that have been banned or simply passé elsewhere for years. Here's a fun public domain read, a cornerstone work from the 1920s, there may be a few tips here not covered in this forum
REMINISCENCES OF A STOCK OPERATOR by Edwin LeFevre
http://ebooks.gutenberg.us/WorldeBookLibrary.com/confessstock.htm