Authors
Emily LC Shepard, Rory P Wilson, Flavio Quintana, Agustina Gómez Laich, Nikolai Liebsch, Diego A Albareda, Lewis G Halsey, Adrian Gleiss, David T Morgan, Andrew E Myers, Chris Newman, David W Macdonald
Publication date
2008/3/31
Journal
Endangered species research
Volume
10
Pages
47-60
Description
An animal's behaviour is a response to its environment and physiological condition, and as such, gives vital clues as to its well-being, which is highly relevant in conservation issues. Behaviour can generally be typified by body motion and body posture, parameters that are both measurable using animal-attached accelerometers. Interpretation of acceleration data, however, can be complex, as the static (indicative of posture) and dynamic (motion) components are derived from the total acceleration values, which should ideally be recorded in all 3-dimensional axes. The principles of triaxial accelerometry are summarised and discussed in terms of the commonalities that arise in patterns of acceleration across species that vary in body pattern, life-history strategy, and the medium they inhabit. Using tri-axial acceleration data from deployments on captive and free-living animals (n= 12 species), behaviours were …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ELC Shepard, RP Wilson, F Quintana, AG Laich… - Endangered species research, 2008