TY - JOUR
T1 - Unmanned aerial vehicles as a useful tool for investigating animal movements
AU - Iwamoto, Masamichi
AU - Nogami, Shonosuke
AU - Ichinose, Tomohiro
AU - Takeda, Keiji
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was performed by the Odawara City government's Odawara growth project ‘Yosegi’; by the Yamagishi student project support program; by the Environment Research and Technology Development Fund (JPMEERF19S20507) of the Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency of Japan; JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number (20H03014); and by the SFC (Shonan Fujisawa Campus) Policy Research Support Organization. The authors are very grateful for this support. They thank Ms Keiko Sasaki for revising their paper. They also thank Satoshi Sugita of the city government of Odawara for helping them to make appointments with local farmers in the Ishibashi district. Finally, they are grateful to the residents' association of the Ishibashi district for letting them conduct the surveys on their farmland and using the public hall as a base camp for the UAV survey.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Methods in Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Ecological Society.
PY - 2022/5
Y1 - 2022/5
N2 - Determining animal abundance is crucial for assessing the effectiveness of management measures against pest animals. Meanwhile, investigating animal movements has become important for conducting abundance estimations of unmarked animals since the random encounter model (REM) was published. REM is a camera trapping method that derives animal density by using contact ratio between camera traps and targeted animals that randomly move at a certain speed in a given area. However, it requires an independent value, which is animal speed. For investigating animal speed, camera traps with video recording and GPS tagging are the commonly used tools. Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are currently used in wildlife monitoring to investigate the abundance of target species. It is evaluated as a tool that is non-invasive and suitable for surveys in inaccessible landscapes. Considering these characteristics, we regarded a distant survey using this technology as suitable for investigating animal movements. Therefore, we proposed a method for estimating animal movements using UAVs and conducted a case study that aimed to investigate wild boars' movements. We collected 11 video samples that successfully followed the movements of wild boars from 26 UAV flights in total, and the average speed of their movements derived from all the samples was 1.54 km/24 hr. We found that issues can be improved, including species identification, video sample length, and animal behaviours or activity patterns. On the other hand, our method showed potential for applying to species with specific characteristics in their body size, shape or activity patterns. With improvements in the issues mentioned above, UAVs would become an alternative tool for investigating animal movements.
AB - Determining animal abundance is crucial for assessing the effectiveness of management measures against pest animals. Meanwhile, investigating animal movements has become important for conducting abundance estimations of unmarked animals since the random encounter model (REM) was published. REM is a camera trapping method that derives animal density by using contact ratio between camera traps and targeted animals that randomly move at a certain speed in a given area. However, it requires an independent value, which is animal speed. For investigating animal speed, camera traps with video recording and GPS tagging are the commonly used tools. Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are currently used in wildlife monitoring to investigate the abundance of target species. It is evaluated as a tool that is non-invasive and suitable for surveys in inaccessible landscapes. Considering these characteristics, we regarded a distant survey using this technology as suitable for investigating animal movements. Therefore, we proposed a method for estimating animal movements using UAVs and conducted a case study that aimed to investigate wild boars' movements. We collected 11 video samples that successfully followed the movements of wild boars from 26 UAV flights in total, and the average speed of their movements derived from all the samples was 1.54 km/24 hr. We found that issues can be improved, including species identification, video sample length, and animal behaviours or activity patterns. On the other hand, our method showed potential for applying to species with specific characteristics in their body size, shape or activity patterns. With improvements in the issues mentioned above, UAVs would become an alternative tool for investigating animal movements.
KW - activity pattern
KW - animal disturbance
KW - animal movement
KW - detection probability
KW - sample length
KW - species identification
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U2 - 10.1111/2041-210X.13829
DO - 10.1111/2041-210X.13829
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85125780803
SN - 2041-210X
VL - 13
SP - 969
EP - 975
JO - Methods in Ecology and Evolution
JF - Methods in Ecology and Evolution
IS - 5
ER -