Mostrando 2 resultados de: 2
An empirical evaluation of camera trap study design: How many, how long and when?
ArticleAbstract: Camera traps deployed in grids or stratified random designs are a well-established survey tool for wPalabras claves:Camera traps, community ecology, detectability, Mammals, Relative abundance, Species richness, study design, wildlife surveysAutores:Arbogast B.S., Baker-Whatton M., Beirne C., Boone H.M., Bowler M., Cove M.V., Ding P., Gonçalves A.L.S., Hansen C.P., Jansen P.A., Kays R., Knowles T.W., Kolowski J.M., McShea W.J., Millspaugh J., Moreira M.G., Pacifici K., Parsons A.W., Pease B.S., Rovero F., Santiago Espinosa, Santiago F. Burneo, Santos F., Schuttler S.G., Sheil D., Si X., Snider M., Spironello W.R.Fuentes:googlescopusThe environmental-data automated track annotation (Env-DATA) system: Linking animal tracks with environmental data
ArticleAbstract: Background: The movement of animals is strongly influenced by external factors in their surroundingPalabras claves:Animal movement, MIGRATION, Movebank, movement ecology, remote sensing, Track annotation, WeatherAutores:Bohrer G., Brandes D., Davidson S., Dodge S., Douglas D., Han J., Kays R., Sebastian M. Cruz, Weinzierl R., Wikelski M.C.Fuentes:scopus