利用步长和转弯角度同时估算动物迁徙的时间和空间范围。

IF 3.4 1区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY Movement Ecology Pub Date : 2024-01-08 DOI:10.1186/s40462-023-00444-8
Peter R Thompson, Peter D Harrington, Conor D Mallory, Subhash R Lele, Erin M Bayne, Andrew E Derocher, Mark A Edwards, Mitch Campbell, Mark A Lewis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:许多不同物种、营养级和生活史策略的动物都会迁徙,动物追踪技术的改进使生态学家能够收集到越来越多有关这些迁徙的详细数据。了解动物迁徙的时间对于管理其种群非常重要,但尽管建模技术不断进步,了解动物迁徙的时间仍然很困难:我们设计了一个模型,从动物追踪数据中对迁徙时间进行参数估计。我们的模型通过步长和转角分布的变化点来确定迁徙运动的开始和结束。为此,我们还可以利用该模型来估计动物开始迁徙时的运动变化情况。除了全面的模拟分析外,我们还在三个数据集上测试了我们的模型:大平原的迁徙性铁皮鹰(Buteo regalis)、加拿大北部的荒原驯鹿(Rangifer tarandus groenlandicus)和加拿大北极地区的非迁徙性棕熊(Ursus arctos):我们的模拟分析表明,我们的模型最适用于运动速度或方向自相关性明显增加的数据集。我们对驯鹿和鹰的迁徙开始和结束时间进行了最近一天的估计,同时证实棕熊没有迁徙行为。除了估计驯鹿和铁钩隼的迁徙时间外,我们的模型还发现了它们迁徙方式的差异;铁钩隼通过大幅提高运动速率来实现高效迁徙,而驯鹿的迁徙则是通过大幅提高方向持续性来实现的:我们的方法适用于许多动物迁徙研究,其中的参数有助于不同物种或数据集之间的比较。我们希望对迁徙指标的严格评估将有助于了解动物迁徙的方式和原因。
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Simultaneous estimation of the temporal and spatial extent of animal migration using step lengths and turning angles.

Background: Animals of many different species, trophic levels, and life history strategies migrate, and the improvement of animal tracking technology allows ecologists to collect increasing amounts of detailed data on these movements. Understanding when animals migrate is important for managing their populations, but is still difficult despite modelling advancements.

Methods: We designed a model that parametrically estimates the timing of migration from animal tracking data. Our model identifies the beginning and end of migratory movements as signaled by change-points in step length and turning angle distributions. To this end, we can also use the model to estimate how an animal's movement changes when it begins migrating. In addition to a thorough simulation analysis, we tested our model on three datasets: migratory ferruginous hawks (Buteo regalis) in the Great Plains, barren-ground caribou (Rangifer tarandus groenlandicus) in northern Canada, and non-migratory brown bears (Ursus arctos) from the Canadian Arctic.

Results: Our simulation analysis suggests that our model is most useful for datasets where an increase in movement speed or directional autocorrelation is clearly detectable. We estimated the beginning and end of migration in caribou and hawks to the nearest day, while confirming a lack of migratory behaviour in the brown bears. In addition to estimating when caribou and ferruginous hawks migrated, our model also identified differences in how they migrated; ferruginous hawks achieved efficient migrations by drastically increasing their movement rates while caribou migration was achieved through significant increases in directional persistence.

Conclusions: Our approach is applicable to many animal movement studies and includes parameters that can facilitate comparison between different species or datasets. We hope that rigorous assessment of migration metrics will aid understanding of both how and why animals move.

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来源期刊
Movement Ecology
Movement Ecology Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
4.90%
发文量
47
审稿时长
23 weeks
期刊介绍: Movement Ecology is an open-access interdisciplinary journal publishing novel insights from empirical and theoretical approaches into the ecology of movement of the whole organism - either animals, plants or microorganisms - as the central theme. We welcome manuscripts on any taxa and any movement phenomena (e.g. foraging, dispersal and seasonal migration) addressing important research questions on the patterns, mechanisms, causes and consequences of organismal movement. Manuscripts will be rigorously peer-reviewed to ensure novelty and high quality.
期刊最新文献
Spatial and temporal predictability drive foraging movements of coastal birds. How do red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) explore their environment? Characteristics of movement patterns in time and space. North American avian species that migrate in flocks show greater long-term non-breeding range shift rates. Seasonal coastal residency and large-scale migration of two grey mullet species in temperate European waters. The influence of thermal and hypoxia induced habitat compression on walleye (Sander vitreus) movements in a temperate lake.
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