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Movement syndromes across vertebrate taxa (data from Abrahms et al. 2017)-argos
Movement syndromes across vertebrate taxa (data from Abrahms et al. 2017)-argos
Citation
Abrahms B. 2017. Movement syndromes across vertebrate taxa (data from Abrahms et al. 2017)-argos. Movebank Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.5441/001/1.hm5nk220/1Abstract
Background: Because empirical studies of animal movement are most-often site- and species-specific, we lack understanding of the level of consistency in movement patterns across diverse taxa, as well as a framework for quantitatively classifying movement patterns. We aim to address this gap by determining the extent to which statistical signatures of animal movement patterns recur across ecological systems. We assessed a suite of movement metrics derived from GPS trajectories of thirteen marine and terrestrial vertebrate species spanning three taxonomic classes, orders of magnitude in body size, and modes of movement (swimming, flying, walking). Using these metrics, we performed a principal components analysis and cluster analysis to determine if individuals organized into statistically distinct clusters. Finally, to identify and interpret commonalities within clusters, we compared them to computer-simulated idealized movement syndromes representing suites of correlated movement traits observed across taxa (migration, nomadism, territoriality, and central place foraging). Results: Two principal components explained 70% of the variance among the movement metrics we evaluated across the thirteen species, and were used for the cluster analysis. The resulting analysis revealed four statistically distinct clusters. All simulated individuals of each idealized movement syndrome organized into separate clusters, suggesting that the four clusters are explained by common movement syndrome. Conclusions: Our results offer early indication of widespread recurrent patterns in movement ecology that have consistent statistical signatures, regardless of taxon, body size, mode of movement, or environment. We further show that a simple set of metrics can be used to classify broad-scale movement patterns in disparate vertebrate taxa. Our comparative approach provides a general framework for quantifying and classifying animal movements, and facilitates new inquiries into relationships between movement syndromes and other ecological processes.
Keywords
African buffalo, African elephant, animal tracking, Antidorcas marsupialis, black-backed jackal, California sea lion, Canis mesomelas, central place foraging, classification scheme, cluster analysis, Equus quagga, Galapagos albatross, Galapagos tortoise, Geochelone nigra, Gyps africanus, Loxodonta africana, migration, Mirounga angustirostris, movement ecology, nomadism, northern elephant seal, Phoebastria irrorata, Plains zebra, springbok, Syncerus caffer, territoriality, white-backed vulture, Zalophus californianus
DOIs of related Publications
BibTex
@misc{001/1_hm5nk220/1, title = {Movement syndromes across vertebrate taxa (data from Abrahms et al. 2017)-argos}, author = {Abrahms, B}, year = {2017}, URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.hm5nk220/1}, doi = {doi:10.5441/001/1.hm5nk220/1}, publisher = {Movebank data repository} }
RIS
TY - DATA ID - doi:10.5441/001/1.hm5nk220/1 T1 - Movement syndromes across vertebrate taxa (data from Abrahms et al. 2017)-argos AU - Abrahms, Briana Y1 - 2017/06/01 KW - African buffalo KW - African elephant KW - animal tracking KW - Antidorcas marsupialis KW - black-backed jackal KW - California sea lion KW - Canis mesomelas KW - central place foraging KW - classification scheme KW - cluster analysis KW - Equus quagga KW - Galapagos albatross KW - Galapagos tortoise KW - Geochelone nigra KW - Gyps africanus KW - Loxodonta africana KW - migration KW - Mirounga angustirostris KW - movement ecology KW - nomadism KW - northern elephant seal KW - Phoebastria irrorata KW - Plains zebra KW - springbok KW - Syncerus caffer KW - territoriality KW - white-backed vulture KW - Zalophus californianus KW - Antidorcas marsupialis KW - Canis mesomelas KW - Chelonoidis hoodensis KW - Chelonoidis porteri KW - Equus burchellii KW - Gyps africanus KW - Loxodonta africana KW - Mirounga angustirostris KW - Phoebastria irrorata KW - Syncerus caffer KW - Zalophus californianus PB - Movebank data repository UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.hm5nk220/1 DO - doi:10.5441/001/1.hm5nk220/1 ER -