Authors
John G Kie, Jason Matthiopoulos, John Fieberg, Roger A Powell, Francesca Cagnacci, Michael S Mitchell, Jean-Michel Gaillard, Paul R Moorcroft
Publication date
2010/7/27
Source
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
365
Issue
1550
Pages
2221-2231
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Recent advances in animal tracking and telemetry technology have allowed the collection of location data at an ever-increasing rate and accuracy, and these advances have been accompanied by the development of new methods of data analysis for portraying space use, home ranges and utilization distributions. New statistical approaches include data-intensive techniques such as kriging and nonlinear generalized regression models for habitat use. In addition, mechanistic home-range models, derived from models of animal movement behaviour, promise to offer new insights into how home ranges emerge as the result of specific patterns of movements by individuals in response to their environment. Traditional methods such as kernel density estimators are likely to remain popular because of their ease of use. Large datasets make it possible to apply these methods over relatively short periods of time such as …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JG Kie, J Matthiopoulos, J Fieberg, RA Powell… - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2010