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Animal-borne technologies in wildlife research and conservation

Kasim Rafiq, Benjamin J. Pitcher, Kate Cornelsen, K. Whitney Hansen, Andrew J. King, Rob G. Appleby, Briana Abrahms, Neil R. Jordan

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    Abstract

    The use of animal-borne devices in wildlife ecology and conservation has expanded in recent decades. animal-borne devices allow a suite of data to be collected, including locational, acoustic, and video. They have revolutionized our ability to collect measurements from animals and the environments that they inhabit, as well as promote the conservation of many species in their natural habitats. However, the use of these devices can also carry animal welfare, ethical, and privacy implications, device costs can limit the deployment of sufficient units, and the complexity of suitable analytical methods can limit inferences made. This chapter covers these topics by discussing how animal-borne devices, and particularly tracking technologies, are currently used in wildlife conservation and ecology. In particular, we discuss how and why animal-borne devices have advanced the study of wildlife, review key animal-borne devices in use today, and discuss the challenges and limitations of their use, as well as future opportunities, by drawing upon real-world examples from research and conservation.

    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationConservation Technology
    EditorsSerge A. Wich, Alex K. Piel
    Place of PublicationNew York
    PublisherOxford University Press
    Chapter6
    Pages105-128
    Number of pages23
    ISBN (Electronic)9780191885471
    ISBN (Print)9780198850250, 9780198850243
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2021

    Keywords

    • accelerometer
    • animal behaviour
    • animal ecology
    • animal-borne technology
    • Argos
    • biologging
    • biotelemetry
    • GPS technology
    • radio-tracking
    • wildlife tracking

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