Authors
Jacqueline L Frair, John Fieberg, Mark Hebblewhite, Francesca Cagnacci, Nicholas J DeCesare, Luca Pedrotti
Publication date
2010/7/27
Source
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
365
Issue
1550
Pages
2187-2200
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Global positioning system (GPS) technologies collect unprecedented volumes of animal location data, providing ever greater insight into animal behaviour. Despite a certain degree of inherent imprecision and bias in GPS locations, little synthesis regarding the predominant causes of these errors, their implications for ecological analysis or solutions exists. Terrestrial deployments report 37 per cent or less non-random data loss and location precision 30 m or less on average, with canopy closure having the predominant effect, and animal behaviour interacting with local habitat conditions to affect errors in unpredictable ways. Home-range estimates appear generally robust to contemporary levels of location imprecision and bias, whereas movement paths and inferences of habitat selection may readily become misleading. There is a critical need for greater understanding of the additive or compounding effects of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JL Frair, J Fieberg, M Hebblewhite, F Cagnacci… - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2010