Results 71 to 80 of about 33,112 (263)
Second‐order habitat selection is influenced by a variety of factors, including individual‐ and species‐specific traits and resource requirements, as well as landscape characteristics. By comparing home range characteristics across individuals, species, and landscapes, we can draw conclusions regarding whether and how different factors influence home ...
Morgan J. Farmer +4 more
wiley +1 more source
movetrack: An R package to model flight paths from radio‐telemetry networks
Tracking small‐ to large‐scale movements of animals is important for studying their interactions with the environment, including how they adjust and adapt their migration in response to environmental and human‐induced changes.
Georg Rüppel +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Data Notes: A New Article Type for Preserving and Sharing Biodiversity Data. [PDF]
ABSTRACT Ecological datasets are frequently at risk of loss due to poor curation and lack of long‐term preservation strategies. To address this challenge, Ecology and Evolution is launching Data Notes, a new article category that provides a citable home for well‐documented datasets.
Soares BE, Jenkins GB.
europepmc +2 more sources
The Asolant/Rubin-5 Technology Demonstration Mission - System Description and First Flight Results [PDF]
This paper addresses the Asolant/Rubin-5 flight experiment conducted onboard the upper stage of a Cosmos rocket in late 2005. The main objective of the project was to flight-qualify a newly developed combined solar cell/antenna device, the so-called ...
Amend, Oliver +4 more
core
Generalizing the first-difference correlated random walk for marine animal movement data [PDF]
Animal telemetry data are often analysed with discrete time movement models assuming rotation in the movement. These models are defined with equidistant distant time steps. However, telemetry data from marine animals are observed irregularly.
Albertsen, Christoffer Moesgaard
core +3 more sources
GPS telemetry for parrots: A case study with the Kea (Nestor notabilis) [PDF]
ABSTRACT Parrots are one of the most complex avian lineages worldwide, yet little is known about their patterns of movement and space use. Such information is vital for understanding the social development and structure of members of this long-lived order, as well as for the establishment of effective conservation and management actions for the many ...
Erin M. Kennedy +4 more
openaire +1 more source
As urbanization increases, wildlife increasingly encounters people. Coyotes Canis latrans and red foxes Vulpes vulpes are two canid species that have readily adapted to urban environments. Citizen science has emerged as a low‐cost method of collecting data on urban‐adapted species that can benefit management agencies but may provide different results ...
Neville F. Taraporevala +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Wind field and sex constrain the flight speeds of central-place foraging albatrosses [PDF]
By extracting energy from the highly dynamic wind and wave fields that typify pelagic habitats, albatrosses are able to proceed almost exclusively by gliding flight.
Akira Fukuda +12 more
core +1 more source
Micro‐habitat selection by boreal woodland caribou improves access to food
Bio‐logging sensors attached to radiotelemetry receivers have great potential to transform our understanding of the ecological, physiological, and energetic constraints that shape patterns of wildlife movement under field conditions. We used video camera collars to assess microhabitat selectivity by woodland caribou Rangifer tarandus in boreal forests ...
Ian D. Thompson +8 more
wiley +1 more source
The growing demand for reliable telemetry infrastructures in mobility and distributed energy systems has intensified the need for modular architectures capable of multivariate data acquisition and low-latency communication.
Rafael Oliveira Dos Santos +2 more
doaj +1 more source

