Abstract

SummaryMovement ecology has developed rapidly over the past decade, driven by advances in tracking technology that have largely removed data limitations. Development of rigorous analytical tools has lagged behind empirical progress, and as a result, relocation data sets have been underutilized.Discrete‐time correlated random walk models (CRW) have long served as the foundation for analyzing relocation data. Unfortunately,CRWs confound the sampling and movement processes.CRWparameter estimates thus depend sensitively on the sampling schedule, which makes it difficult to draw sampling‐independent inferences about the underlying movement process. Furthermore,CRWs cannot accommodate the multiscale autocorrelations that typify modern, finely sampled relocation data sets.Recent developments in modelling movement as a continuous‐time stochastic process (CTSP) solve these problems, but the mathematical difficulty of usingCTSPs has limited their adoption in ecology. To remove this roadblock, we introduce thectmmpackage for the R statistical computing environment.ctmmimplements all of theCTSPs currently in use in the ecological literature and couples them with powerful statistical methods for autocorrelated data adapted from geostatistics and signal processing, including variograms, periodograms and non‐Markovian maximum likelihood estimation.ctmmis built around a standard workflow that begins with visual diagnostics, proceeds to candidate model identification, and then to maximum likelihood fitting andAIC‐based model selection. Once an accurateCTSPfor the data has been fitted and selected, analyses that require such a model, such as quantifying home range areas via autocorrelated kernel density estimation or estimating occurrence distributions via time‐series Kriging, can then be performed.We use a case study with African buffalo to demonstrate the capabilities ofctmmand highlight the steps of a typicalCTSPmovement analysis workflow.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call