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Proceedings of the 6th Bio-Logging Science Symposium

This cross-journal collection is published in 
New Content Item Animal Biotelemetry   and   New Content Item  Movement Ecology


  1. Archival tags have been used on fish for a number of years to measure temperature, pressure and salinity, among other parameters. Measurements of heart rate in fish can be used in a wide variety of biological ...

    Authors: Ásgeir Bjarnason, Andrés Gunnarsson, Tómas Árnason, Matthías Oddgeirsson, Anton Björn Sigmarsson and Ásgeir Gunnarsson
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2019 7:13
  2. Recent advances in satellite tagging technologies for marine animals have provided opportunities to investigate the spatial ecology of pelagic species including at-sea behavior and predator–prey interactions. ...

    Authors: Casey L. Brown, Markus Horning and Amanda M. Bishop
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2019 7:4
  3. Classifying behaviour with animal-borne accelerometers is quickly becoming a popular tool for remotely observing behavioural states in a variety of species. Most accelerometry work in pinnipeds has focused on ...

    Authors: Courtney R. Shuert, Patrick P. Pomeroy and Sean D. Twiss
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2018 6:14
  4. High-latitude bird migration has evolved after the last glaciation, in less than 10,000–15,000 years. Migrating songbirds rely on an endogenous migratory program, encoding timing, fueling, and routes, but it i...

    Authors: Kristaps Sokolovskis, Giuseppe Bianco, Mikkel Willemoes, Diana Solovyeva, Staffan Bensch and Susanne Åkesson
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2018 6:20
  5. Over the past decade, the miniaturisation of animal borne tags such as geolocators and GPS-transmitters has revolutionized our knowledge of the whereabouts of migratory species. Novel light-weight multi-sensor...

    Authors: Felix Liechti, Silke Bauer, Kiran L. Dhanjal-Adams, Tamara Emmenegger, Pavel Zehtindjiev and Steffen Hahn
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2018 6:19
  6. Increases in landscape connectivity can improve a species’ ability to cope with habitat fragmentation and degradation. Wildlife corridors increase landscape connectivity and it is therefore important to identi...

    Authors: Anne K. Scharf, Jerrold L. Belant, Dean E. Beyer Jr, Martin Wikelski and Kamran Safi
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2018 6:18
  7. Globally, there are a large and growing number of researchers using biotelemetry as a tool to study aquatic animals. In Europe, this community lacks a formal network structure. The aim of this study is to revi...

    Authors: David Abecasis, Andre Steckenreuter, Jan Reubens, Kim Aarestrup, Josep Alós, Fabio Badalamenti, Lenore Bajona, Patrick Boylan, Klaas Deneudt, Larry Greenberg, Niels Brevé, Francisco Hernández, Nick Humphries, Carl Meyer, David Sims, Eva B. Thorstad…
    Citation: Animal Biotelemetry 2018 6:12
  8. A utilization distribution quantifies the temporal and spatial probability of space use for individuals or populations. These patterns in movement arise from individuals’ internal state and from their response...

    Authors: Amanda Bishop, Casey Brown, Michael Rehberg, Leigh Torres and Markus Horning
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2018 6:6