Abstract

Analyses of animal movement data have primarily focused on understanding patterns of space use and the behavioural processes driving them. Here, we analyzed animal movement data to infer components of individual fitness, specifically parturition and neonate survival. We predicted that parturition and neonate loss events could be identified by sudden and marked changes in female movement patterns. Using GPS radio-telemetry data from female woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou), we developed and tested two novel movement-based methods for inferring parturition and neonate survival. The first method estimated movement thresholds indicative of parturition and neonate loss from population-level data then applied these thresholds in a moving-window analysis on individual time-series data. The second method used an individual-based approach that discriminated among three a priori models representing the movement patterns of non-parturient females, females with surviving offspring, and females losing offspring. The models assumed that step lengths (the distance between successive GPS locations) were exponentially distributed and that abrupt changes in the scale parameter of the exponential distribution were indicative of parturition and offspring loss. Both methods predicted parturition with near certainty (>97% accuracy) and produced appropriate predictions of parturition dates. Prediction of neonate survival was affected by data quality for both methods; however, when using high quality data (i.e., with few missing GPS locations), the individual-based method performed better, predicting neonate survival status with an accuracy rate of 87%. Understanding ungulate population dynamics often requires estimates of parturition and neonate survival rates. With GPS radio-collars increasingly being used in research and management of ungulates, our movement-based methods represent a viable approach for estimating rates of both parameters.

Highlights

  • In the last 20 years, the analysis of animal movement has been a fundamental component of wildlife research and management

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • For the population-based method (PBM), we calculated a calving threshold of 15.3 m/h (Fig. 3a; sample range of three-day average movement (TDAM) rates 3 days postcalving: 3.78, 11.35 m/h) which correctly discriminated among females that calved and non-pregnant females in 2011 and 2004 (n = 34)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In the last 20 years, the analysis of animal movement has been a fundamental component of wildlife research and management. Inferring Parturition and Neonate Survival angles (the relative directional change in movement trajectory) and autocorrelation (the tendency to move in a similar direction or pattern) have yielded insights as to how animals move in heterogeneous landscapes (Johnson et al 2002; Morales and Ellner 2002; Forester et al 2007) and establish home ranges (Moorcroft et al 2006; Bo€rger et al 2008; Moorcroft 2012). The primary objectives for most movement studies remain similar: relating animal movement to environmental variation, behavioural states, or predictions of space use

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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