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  1. Tracking animal movement is important for understanding how animals interact with their (changing) environment, and crucial for predicting and explaining how animals are affected by anthropogenic activities. T...

    Authors: Allert I. Bijleveld, Frank van Maarseveen, Bas Denissen, Anne Dekinga, Emma Penning, Selin Ersoy, Pratik R. Gupte, Luc de Monte, Job ten Horn, Roeland A. Bom, Sivan Toledo, Ran Nathan and Christine E. Beardsworth
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:36
  2. Animals sometimes forage in mixed species groups, where an individual of a “follower” species actively trails a foraging individual of another “nuclear” species to benefit from the latter’s foraging strategy. ...

    Authors: Connor F. White, Harold. L. Pratt Jr., Theo C. Pratt and Nicholas M. Whitney
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:35
  3. Fin-mounted geolocators are widely used in marine studies to track animal movements and to design informed management strategies. However, the deployment protocols of such geolocators, which normally consist o...

    Authors: Vital Heim, Daniel Lüscher, Jürgen Hottinger and Dieter Ebert
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:33
  4. Of all animals considered subjects for instrumentation for behavioral or physiological studies, cetaceans probably represent the greatest challenge to the engineer and biologist. The marine environment being h...

    Authors: Lars Kleivane, Petter H. Kvadsheim, Alex Bocconcelli, Nils Øien and Patrick J. O. Miller
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:32
  5. Studying the anti-predatory behavior of mammals represents an important challenge, especially for fossorial small mammals that hide in burrows. In the Arctic, such behaviors are critical to the survival of lem...

    Authors: David Bolduc, Dominique Fauteux, Éric Bharucha, Jean-Marie Trudeau and Pierre Legagneux
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:31
  6. Throughout their range, red deer are a well-studied species. In Italy, this species occupies two ecologically different ranges: the Alps and the Apennines. Although several studies have described the spatial b...

    Authors: Riccardo Fontana, Licia Calabrese, Ambrogio Lanzi, Elisa Armaroli and Elisabetta Raganella Pelliccioni
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:30
  7. As levels of anthropogenic noise in the marine environment rise, it is crucial to quantify potential associated effects on marine mammals. Yet measuring responses is challenging because most species spend the ...

    Authors: Joshua Hewitt, Alan E. Gelfand, Nicola J. Quick, William R. Cioffi, Brandon L. Southall, Stacy L. DeRuiter and Robert S. Schick
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:28
  8. Chronotypes describe consistent differences between individuals in biological time-keeping. They have been linked both with underlying variation in the circadian system and fitness. Quantification of chronotyp...

    Authors: Aurelia F. T. Strauß, Dominic J. McCafferty, Andreas Nord, Marina Lehmann and Barbara Helm
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:27
  9. Despite spending most time underwater, the technology in use to track whales over large geographic ranges via satellite has been largely limited to locational data, with most applications focusing on character...

    Authors: Daniel M. Palacios, Ladd M. Irvine, Barbara A. Lagerquist, James A. Fahlbusch, John Calambokidis, Stanley M. Tomkiewicz and Bruce R. Mate
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:26
  10. Little is known about the fine-scale behavioural choices white sharks make. The assessment of movement at high spatio-temporal resolution can improve our understanding of behavioural patterns. Active acoustic ...

    Authors: E. Gennari, D. T. Irion and P. D. Cowley
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:25
  11. Advancements in biologging technology allow terabytes of data to be collected that record the location of individuals but also their direction, speed and acceleration. These multi-stream data sets allow resear...

    Authors: Luke Ozsanlav-Harris, Larry R. Griffin, Mitch D. Weegman, Lei Cao, Geoff M. Hilton and Stuart Bearhop
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:24
  12. The first successful application of implanted archival tags on striped marlin showed great potential in obtaining long-term tracks for an improved understanding of movement ecology, which is important for info...

    Authors: Chi Hin Lam, Nicole Nasby-Lucas, Sofia Ortega-Garcia, Paxson Offield and Michael L. Domeier
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:23
  13. The Northwestern Pacific is a data-poor region for studies into the movements and habitat use of open ocean and pelagic sharks. However, this region experiences considerable pressure from commercial fishing. T...

    Authors: David M. P. Jacoby, Yuuki Y. Watanabe, Tre Packard, Mark Healey, Yannis P. Papastamatiou and Austin J. Gallagher
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:22
  14. Satellite telemetry devices can record movement data of animals along with the environmental data. Such data are relayed remotely via satellite systems, but are constrained by the limited bandwidth availabilit...

    Authors: Narumi Kishida, Junichi Okuyama, Mamiko Arita, Natsuki Kume, Kento Fujita, Hideaki Nishizawa, Shinsuke Torisawa and Yasushi Mitsunaga
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:21
  15. Understanding connectivity is critical to the management of exploited fish stocks, but migratory dynamics of Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus stenolepis) in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands region are not well-un...

    Authors: Timothy Loher
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:18
  16. In acoustic telemetry studies, detection range is usually evaluated as the relationship between the probability of detecting an individual transmission and the distance between the transmitter and receiver. Wh...

    Authors: Jolien Goossens, Jolien Buyse, Stijn Bruneel, Pieterjan Verhelst, Peter Goethals, Els Torreele, Tom Moens and Jan Reubens
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:17
  17. Despite rapid advances in sensor development and technological miniaturization, it remains challenging to non-invasively record small-amplitude electrophysiological signals from an animal in its natural enviro...

    Authors: Jessica M. Kendall-Bar, Ritika Mukherji, Jordan Nichols, Catherine Lopez, Daniel A. Lozano, Julie K. Pitman, Rachel R. Holser, Roxanne S. Beltran, Matt Schalles, Cara L. Field, Shawn P. Johnson, Alexei L. Vyssotski, Daniel P. Costa and Terrie M. Williams
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:16
  18. Monitoring and assessing cardiac activity in animals, especially heart rate variability, has been gaining importance in the last few years as an indicator of animal health, well-being and physical condition. T...

    Authors: Radana Kahankova, Jakub Kolarik, Jindřich Brablik, Katerina Barnova, Ivana Simkova and Radek Martinek
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:15
  19. Recent declines of honeybees and simplifications of wild bee communities, at least partly attributed to changes of agricultural landscapes, have worried both the public and the scientific community. To underst...

    Authors: Klas Rydhmer, Jord Prangsma, Mikkel Brydegaard, Henrik G. Smith, Carsten Kirkeby, Inger Kappel Schmidt and Birte Boelt
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:14
  20. The blue marlin (Makaira nigricans) is a vulnerable migratory fish inhabiting tropical and subtropical pelagic waters of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans. The biology and spatial ecology of the species in ...

    Authors: Carla Freitas, Mafalda Freitas, Samantha Andrzejaczek, Jonathan J. Dale, Wayne Whippen and Barbara A. Block
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:12
  21. The anadromous alewife is a commercially fished clupeid in Atlantic Canada, whose oceanic migration is poorly understood. Migration of alewives is presently investigated from the lower reaches of Gaspereau Riv...

    Authors: Elizabetha Tsitrin, Brian G. Sanderson, Montana F. McLean, A. Jamie F. Gibson, David C. Hardie and Michael J. W. Stokesbury
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:11
  22. Recent developments in both hardware and software of animal-borne data loggers now enable large amounts of data to be collected on both animal movement and behaviour. In particular, the combined use of tri-axi...

    Authors: E. A. Magowan, I. E. Maguire, S. Smith, S. Redpath, N. J. Marks, R. P. Wilson, F. Menzies, M. O’Hagan and D. M. Scantlebury
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:10
  23. Externally attached archival data logging tags are increasingly used to unravel migration routes of fish species at sea. Due to the relatively large size of the tags, their application on seaward migrating ang...

    Authors: Pieterjan Verhelst, Kim Aarestrup, Gustav Hellström, Niels Jepsen, Anders Koed, Jan Reubens, Niklas Sjöberg, Jon Christian Svendsen and Martin Lykke Kristensen
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:9
  24. Locomotion is often a necessity for animal survival and can account for a large proportion of an individual’s energy budget. Therefore, determining the energy costs of locomotion is an important part of unders...

    Authors: Christina C. Mulvenna, Nikki J. Marks, Rory P. Wilson, Lewis G. Halsey and David M. Scantlebury
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:8
  25. Remote-sensing technology facilitates longitudinal collection of body temperature during periods of hot or cold environmental stress without human interference, producing high-frequency measurements whilst red...

    Authors: Bobbie E. Lewis Baida, Mathias Baumert, Alok Kushwaha, Alyce M. Swinbourne, Stephan T. Leu and William H. E. J. van Wettere
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:6
  26. Population parameters such as reproductive success are critical for sustainably managing ungulate populations, however obtaining these data is often difficult, expensive, and invasive. Movement-based methods t...

    Authors: Nathan D. Hooven, Kathleen E. Williams, John T. Hast, Joseph R. McDermott, R. Daniel Crank, Gabe Jenkins, Matthew T. Springer and John J. Cox
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:5
  27. Acoustic telemetry is widely used as a method for high resolution monitoring of aquatic animal movement to investigate relationships between individual animals and their environment. In shallow freshwater ecos...

    Authors: Kirstine Thiemer, Robert J. Lennox and Thrond Oddvar Haugen
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:4
  28. Combining data from multiple acoustic telemetry studies has revealed that west coast England Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) smolts used a northward migration pathway through the Irish Sea to reach their feeding...

    Authors: Amy Green, Hannele M. Honkanen, Philip Ramsden, Brian Shields, Diego del Villar-Guerra, Melanie Fletcher, Silas Walton, Richard Kennedy, Robert Rosell, Niall O’Maoiléidigh, James Barry, William Roche, Fred Whoriskey, Peter Klimley and Colin E. Adams
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:3
  29. Environmental conditions can influence animal movements, determining when and how much animals move. Yet few studies have quantified how abiotic environmental factors (e.g., ambient temperature, snow depth, pr...

    Authors: Caleb M. Bryce, Carolyn E. Dunford, Anthony M. Pagano, Yiwei Wang, Bridget L. Borg, Stephen M. Arthur and Terrie M. Williams
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2022 10:1
  30. We report compelling evidence suggesting a predation event of a pop-up satellite archival tagged anadromous Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma) by a marine mammal during summer in the Beaufort Sea based on abrupt cha...

    Authors: Colin P. Gallagher, Luke Storrie, Michael B. Courtney, Kimberly L. Howland, Ellen V. Lea, Shannon MacPhee and Lisa Loseto
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:48
  31. The energy used by animals is influenced by intrinsic (e.g. physiological) and extrinsic (e.g. environmental) factors. Accelerometers within biologging devices have proven useful for assessing energy expenditu...

    Authors: Eleanor R. Dickinson, Philip A. Stephens, Nikki J. Marks, Rory P. Wilson and David M. Scantlebury
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:47
  32. The successful use of acoustic telemetry to detect fish hinges on understanding the factors that control the acoustic range. The speed-of-sound in water is primarily a function of density, and in freshwater la...

    Authors: Yulong Kuai, Natalie V. Klinard, Aaron T. Fisk, Timothy B. Johnson, Edmund A. Halfyard, Dale M. Webber, Stephanie J. Smedbol and Mathew G. Wells
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:46
  33. Bats are remarkable in their dynamic control over body temperature, showing both hypothermia with torpor and hyperthermia during flight. Despite considerable research in understanding bats’ thermoregulation me...

    Authors: Jinhong Luo, Stefan Greif, Huan Ye, Sara Bumrungsri, Ofri Eitan and Yossi Yovel
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:45
  34. Detecting when and where animals feed is key to understanding their ecophysiology, but our ability to collect these data in marine mammals remains limited. Here, we test a tag-based accelerometry method to det...

    Authors: Mason R. Cole, Jenifer A. Zeligs, Stefani Skrovan and Birgitte I. McDonald
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:44
  35. Understanding what animals do in time and space is important for a range of ecological questions, however accurate estimates of how animals use space is challenging. Within the use of animal-attached tags, rad...

    Authors: Richard M. Gunner, Mark D. Holton, David M. Scantlebury, Phil Hopkins, Emily L. C. Shepard, Adam J. Fell, Baptiste Garde, Flavio Quintana, Agustina Gómez-Laich, Ken Yoda, Takashi Yamamoto, Holly English, Sam Ferreira, Danny Govender, Pauli Viljoen, Angela Bruns…
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:43
  36. Despite exhibiting one of the longest migrations in the world, half of the humpback whale migratory cycle has remained unexamined. Until now, no study has provided a continuous description of humpback whale mi...

    Authors: Michelle Modest, Ladd Irvine, Virginia Andrews-Goff, William Gough, David Johnston, Douglas Nowacek, Logan Pallin, Andrew Read, Reny Tyson Moore and Ari Friedlaender
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:42
  37. Welfare challenges in salmon farming highlights the need to improve understanding of the fish’s response to its environment and rearing operations. This can be achieved by monitoring physiological responses su...

    Authors: Eirik Svendsen, Finn Økland, Martin Føre, Lise L. Randeberg, Bengt Finstad, Rolf E. Olsen and Jo A. Alfredsen
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:41
  38. While the period from fledging through first breeding for waterbird species such as terns (e.g., genus Sterna, Sternula) is of great interest to researchers and conservationists, this period remains understudi...

    Authors: Evan J. Buck, Jeffery D. Sullivan, Cody M. Kent, Jennifer M. Mullinax and Diann J. Prosser
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:32
  39. Defining the spatial distribution, home range, and movement patterns of lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) is important to managers and decision-makers given the large migration potential and potamodromous beha...

    Authors: Jonah L. Withers, Helen Takade-Heumacher, Lori Davis, Rachel Neuenhoff, Shannon E. Albeke and John A. Sweka
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:40
  40. Quantifying metabolic rate in free-living animals is invaluable in understanding the costs of behaviour and movement for individuals and communities. Dynamic body acceleration (DBA) metrics, such as vectoral D...

    Authors: Lloyd W. Hopkins, Nathan R. Geraldi, Edward C. Pope, Mark D. Holton, Miguel Lurgi, Carlos M. Duarte and Rory P. Wilson
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:30
  41. Passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags are commonly used to identify individual fish. However, use of PIT tags in commercial aquaculture research is limited by consumer safety concerns. For farmed fish, it ...

    Authors: Tina Oldham, Georgia Macaulay, Malin Stalheim and Frode Oppedal
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:39
  42. Okanagan River Sockeye Salmon Oncorhynchus nerka (Okanagan Sockeye) are one of two remaining self-sustaining Sockeye Salmon populations in the Columbia River Basin. We used detection histories of smolts implanted...

    Authors: Josh Murauskas, Kim Hyatt, Jeff Fryer, Elliot Koontz, Skyeler Folks, Richard Bussanich and Katy Shelby
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2021 9:37

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