Abstract

Acoustic positional telemetry systems (APTs) represent a novel approach to study the behaviour of free ranging aquatic animals in the wild at unprecedented detail. System manufactures promise remarkably high temporal and spatial resolution. However, the performance of APTs has rarely been rigorously tested at the level of entire ecosystems. Moreover, the effect of habitat structure on system performance has only been poorly documented. Two APTs were deployed to cover two small lakes and a series of standardized stationary tests were conducted to assess system performance. Furthermore, a number of tow tests were conducted to simulate moving fish. Based on these data, we quantified system performance in terms of data yield, accuracy and precision as a function of structural complexity in relation to vegetation. Mean data yield of the two systems was 40 % (Lake1) and 60 % (Lake2). Average system accuracy (acc) and precision (prec) were Lake1: acc = 3.1 m, prec = 1.1 m; Lake2: acc = 1.0 m, prec = 0.2 m. System performance was negatively affected by structural complexity, i.e., open water habitats yielded far better performance than structurally complex vegetated habitats. Post-processing greatly improved data quality, and sub-meter accuracy and precision were, on average, regularly achieved in Lake2 but remained the exception in the larger and structurally more complex Lake1. Moving transmitters were tracked well by both systems. Whereas overestimation of moved distance is inevitable for stationary transmitters due to accumulation of small tracking errors, moving transmitters can result in both over- and underestimation of distances depending on circumstances. Both deployed APTs were capable of providing high resolution positional data at the scale of entire lakes and are suitable systems to mine the reality of free ranging fish in their natural environment. This opens important opportunities to advance several fields of study such as movement ecology and animal social networks in the wild. It is recommended that thorough performance tests are conducted in any study utilizing APTs. The APTs tested here appear best suited for studies in structurally simple ecosystems or for studying pelagic species. In such situations, the data quality provided by the APTs is exceptionally high.

Highlights

  • Animal behaviour drives many ecological and evolutionary processes in both terrestrial and aquatic environments

  • The study was conducted in two shallow lowland lakes located in Germany and Denmark, each equipped with an Acoustic positional telemetry systems (APTs) system based on the CDMA technology provided by Lotek Wireless (Fig 1; Table 1)

  • We evaluated the performance of two different APT systems covering two lakes differing in habitat complexity and structure, and assessed efficiency, accuracy and precision of positional data

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Summary

Introduction

Animal behaviour drives many ecological and evolutionary processes in both terrestrial and aquatic environments. Fish behaviour can for example influence nutrient dynamics and trophic status [1] and affect the diversity and stability of communities [2]. From an evolutionary point of view, behaviour can compensate for alternative phenotypic traits [3] and may influence whether a novel trait spreads in a population [4]. Behaviour is increasingly integrated into ecological [8] and eco-evolutionary models [9]. Furthering our understanding of the relationship of individual animal behaviour to population ecology and evolution in aquatic environments is often severely constrained by technical limitations that make high resolution observations in the wild difficult

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