WATLAS: high-throughput and real-time tracking of many small birds in the Dutch Wadden Sea

Abstract Tracking animal movement is important for understanding how animals interact with their (changing) environment, and crucial for predicting and explaining how animals are affected by anthropogenic activities. The Wadden Sea is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a region of global importance for millions of shorebirds. Due to climate change and anthropogenic activity, understanding and predicting movement and space-use in areas like the Wadden Sea is increasingly important. Monitoring and predicting animal movement, however, requires high-resolution tracking of many individuals. While hig... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Allert I. Bijleveld
Frank van Maarseveen
Bas Denissen
Anne Dekinga
Emma Penning
Selin Ersoy
Pratik R. Gupte
Luc de Monte
Job ten Horn
Roeland A. Bom
Sivan Toledo
Ran Nathan
Christine E. Beardsworth
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Reihe/Periodikum: Animal Biotelemetry, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-17 (2022)
Verlag/Hrsg.: BMC
Schlagwörter: Animal tracking / ATLAS / Biologging / Biotelemetry / Conservation / High-throughput movement ecology / Ecology / QH540-549.5 / Animal biochemistry / QP501-801
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27404323
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://doi.org/10.1186/s40317-022-00307-w

Abstract Tracking animal movement is important for understanding how animals interact with their (changing) environment, and crucial for predicting and explaining how animals are affected by anthropogenic activities. The Wadden Sea is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a region of global importance for millions of shorebirds. Due to climate change and anthropogenic activity, understanding and predicting movement and space-use in areas like the Wadden Sea is increasingly important. Monitoring and predicting animal movement, however, requires high-resolution tracking of many individuals. While high-resolution tracking has been made possible through GPS, trade-offs between tag weight and battery life limit its use to larger species. Here, we introduce WATLAS (the Wadden Sea deployment of the ATLAS tracking system) capable of monitoring the movements of hundreds of (small) birds simultaneously in the Dutch Wadden Sea. WATLAS employs an array of receiver stations that can detect and localize small, low-cost tags at fine spatial (metres) and temporal resolution (seconds). From 2017 to 2021, we tracked red knots, sanderlings, bar-tailed godwits, and common terns. We use parts of these data to give four use-cases revealing its performance and demonstrating how WATLAS can be used to study numerous aspects of animal behaviour, such as, space-use (both intra- and inter-specific), among-individual variation, and social networks across levels of organization: from individuals, to species, to populations, and even communities. After describing the WATLAS system, we first illustrate space-use of red knots across the study area and how the tidal environment affects their movement. Secondly, we show large among-individual differences in distances travelled per day, and thirdly illustrate how high-throughput WATLAS data allows calculating a proximity-based social network. Finally, we demonstrate that using WATLAS to monitor multiple species can reveal differential space use. For example, despite sanderlings and red knots roosting ...