NSIP

Resources

Title
The need for speed: testing acceleration for estimating animal travel rates in terrestrial dead-reckoning systems
Author(s)
Bidder, O. R.;Soresina, M.;Shepard, E. L. C.;Halsey, L. G.;Quintana, F.;Gómez-Laich, A.;Wilson, R. P.
Published
2012
Publisher
Zoology
Abstract
Numerous methods are currently available to track animal movements. However, only one of these, dead-reckoning, has the capacity to provide continuous data for animal movements over fine scales. Dead-reckoning has been applied almost exclusively in the study of marine species, in part due to the difficulty of accurately measuring the speed of terrestrial species. In the present study we evaluate the use of accelerometers and a metric known as overall dynamic body acceleration (ODBA) as a proxy for the measurement of speed for use in dead-reckoning. Data were collated from previous studies, for 10 species locomoting on a treadmill and their ODBA measured by an attached data logger. All species except one showed a highly significant linear relationship between speed and ODBA; however, there was appreciable inter- and intra-specific variance in this relationship. ODBA was then used to estimate speed in a simple trial run of a dead-reckoning track. Estimating distance travelled using speed derived from prior calibration for ODBA resulted in appreciable errors. We describe a method by which these errors can be minimised, by periodic ground-truthing (e.g., by GPS or VHF telemetry) of the dead-reckoned track and adjusting the relationship between speed and ODBA until actual known positions and dead-reckoned positions accord. © 2011 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
Keywords
Dead-reckoning;Overall dynamic body acceleration;Telemetry;Terrestrial locomotion;Track tortuosity

Access Full Text

A full-text copy of this article may be available. Please email the WCS Library to request.




Back

PUB13394