Step by step: reconstruction of terrestrial animal movement paths by dead-reckoning

被引:84
作者
Bidder, O. R. [1 ]
Walker, J. S. [2 ]
Jones, M. W. [2 ]
Holton, M. D. [3 ]
Urge, P. [4 ]
Scantlebury, D. M. [5 ]
Marks, N. J. [5 ]
Magowan, E. A. [5 ]
Maguire, I. E. [5 ]
Wilson, R. P. [6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Vet Med Hannover, Inst Terrestr & Aquat Wildtierforschung, Werfstr 6, D-25761 Busum, Germany
[2] Swansea Univ, Coll Sci, Dept Comp Sci, Swansea SA2 8PP, W Glam, Wales
[3] Swansea Univ, Coll Engn, Swansea SA2 8PP, W Glam, Wales
[4] Univ Strasbourg, Fac Sci Vie, Ecophysiol & Ethol, F-67083 Strasbourg, France
[5] Queens Univ Belfast, Inst Global Food Secur, Sch Biol Sci, Belfast BT9 7BL, Antrim, North Ireland
[6] Swansea Univ, Coll Sci, Biosci, Swansea Lab Anim Movement, Swansea SA2 8PP, W Glam, Wales
来源
MOVEMENT ECOLOGY | 2015年 / 3卷
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
Step length; dead reckoning; animal movement; GPS; terrestrial; GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM; DIEL VERTICAL MIGRATION; GPS TRACKING; MARINE PREDATOR; SEARCH PATTERNS; NATIONAL-PARK; SWIM SPEED; FINE-SCALE; HABITAT; ACCELERATION;
D O I
10.1186/s40462-015-0055-4
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Background: Research on wild animal ecology is increasingly employing GPS telemetry in order to determine animal movement. However, GPS systems record position intermittently, providing no information on latent position or track tortuosity. High frequency GPS have high power requirements, which necessitates large batteries (often effectively precluding their use on small animals) or reduced deployment duration. Dead-reckoning is an alternative approach which has the potential to 'fill in the gaps' between less resolute forms of telemetry without incurring the power costs. However, although this method has been used in aquatic environments, no explicit demonstration of terrestrial dead-reckoning has been presented. Results: We perform a simple validation experiment to assess the rate of error accumulation in terrestrial deadreckoning. In addition, examples of successful implementation of dead-reckoning are given using data from the domestic dog Canus lupus, horse Equus ferus, cow Bos taurus and wild badger Meles meles. Conclusions: This study documents how terrestrial dead-reckoning can be undertaken, describing derivation of heading from tri-axial accelerometer and tri-axial magnetometer data, correction for hard and soft iron distortions on the magnetometer output, and presenting a novel correction procedure to marry dead-reckoned paths to ground-truthed positions. This study is the first explicit demonstration of terrestrial dead-reckoning, which provides a workable method of deriving the paths of animals on a step-by-step scale. The wider implications of this method for the understanding of animal movement ecology are discussed.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 127 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1983, The Ecology of Animal Movement
[2]  
[Anonymous], P 15 INT S BIOT
[3]   Scale-free dynamics in the movement patterns of jackals [J].
Atkinson, RPD ;
Rhodes, CJ ;
Macdonald, DW ;
Anderson, RM .
OIKOS, 2002, 98 (01) :134-140
[4]   How to reliably estimate the tortuosity of an animal's path: straightness, sinuosity, or fractal dimension? [J].
Benhamou, S .
JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 2004, 229 (02) :209-220
[5]   On Higher Ground: How Well Can Dynamic Body Acceleration Determine Speed in Variable Terrain? [J].
Bidder, Owen R. ;
Qasem, Lama A. ;
Wilson, Rory P. .
PLOS ONE, 2012, 7 (11)
[6]   The need for speed: testing acceleration for estimating animal travel rates in terrestrial dead-reckoning systems [J].
Bidder, Owen R. ;
Soresina, Marion ;
Shepard, Emily Lc. ;
Halsey, Lewis G. ;
Quintana, Flavio ;
Gomez-Laich, Agustina ;
Wilson, Rory P. .
ZOOLOGY, 2012, 115 (01) :58-64
[7]   SPATIAL-ANALYSIS OF ANIMALS MOVEMENTS USING A CORRELATED RANDOM-WALK MODEL [J].
BOVET, P ;
BENHAMOU, S .
JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 1988, 131 (04) :419-433
[8]   Loyalty pays: potential life history consequences of fidelity to marine foraging regions by southern elephant seals [J].
Bradshaw, CJA ;
Hindell, MA ;
Sumner, MD ;
Michael, KJ .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2004, 68 :1349-1360
[9]  
BRAMANTI M, 1988, J EXP BIOL, V134, P467
[10]   The effects of biotelemetry transmitter presence and attachment procedures on fish physiology and behavior [J].
Bridger, CJ ;
Booth, RK .
REVIEWS IN FISHERIES SCIENCE, 2003, 11 (01) :13-34