Animal ecology meets GPS-based radiotelemetry: a perfect storm of opportunities and challenges

Author:

Cagnacci Francesca1,Boitani Luigi2,Powell Roger A.3,Boyce Mark S.4

Affiliation:

1. Research and Innovation Centre, Environment and Natural Resources Area, Edmund Mach Foundation, via Mach 1, 38010 San Michele all'Adige, Trento, Italy

2. Deparment of Animal and Human Biology, University of Rome ‘La Sapienza’, viale dell'Università 32, 00185 Rome, Italy

3. Department of Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA

4. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada T6G 2E9

Abstract

Global positioning system (GPS) telemetry technology allows us to monitor and to map the details of animal movement, securing vast quantities of such data even for highly cryptic organisms. We envision an exciting synergy between animal ecology and GPS-based radiotelemetry, as for other examples of new technologies stimulating rapid conceptual advances, where research opportunities have been paralleled by technical and analytical challenges. Animal positions provide the elemental unit of movement paths and show where individuals interact with the ecosystems around them. We discuss how knowing where animals go can help scientists in their search for a mechanistic understanding of key concepts of animal ecology, including resource use, home range and dispersal, and population dynamics. It is probable that in the not-so-distant future, intense sampling of movements coupled with detailed information on habitat features at a variety of scales will allow us to represent an animal's cognitive map of its environment, and the intimate relationship between behaviour and fitness. An extended use of these data over long periods of time and over large spatial scales can provide robust inferences for complex, multi-factorial phenomena, such as meta-analyses of the effects of climate change on animal behaviour and distribution.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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