Search results for " Telemetry"

showing 10 items of 31 documents

Calibrating accelerometer data, as a promising tool for health and welfare monitoring in aquaculture: Case study in European sea bass (Dicentrarchus …

2021

Abstract Both the conventional and organic aquaculture sectors have grown rapidly over the past few years. Moreover, welfare has attracted increased attention on the part of both consumers and governments. However, fish welfare assessment is complex and thus needs to adapt measurements that are easily applicable to aquaculture conditions. In this study, in addition to classical welfare indicator measurements (physiological stress indicators and growth performance), we recorded the swimming activity data using acoustic transmitters to evaluate the welfare of European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) fed a conventional vs. an organic diet. Prior feeding trial, the swimming activity recorded by…

Healt aquaculture organic Dicentrarchusmedia_common.quotation_subjectWelfareSH1-691Physiological telemetryAquatic ScienceAquacultureAquaculture. Fisheries. AnglingAccelerometer dataSea bassPhysiological stressPrior - feedingmedia_commonOrganic aquaculturebiologybusiness.industrybiology.organism_classificationFisheryCritical swimming speed UcritOrganic aquacultureEnvironmental scienceAnimal Science and ZoologyDicentrarchusbusinessWelfareMuscle activityAquaculture Reports
researchProduct

Strategies of migration and wintering of Italian lesser kestrel Falco naumanni populations.

2017

Avian migration is naturally a plastic trait, and tracking migratory birds is problematic because of distances and areas involved. Electronic data loggers (e.g. light-level geolocators, GPS/GSM tags, etc) provide a means to directly follow several individuals and understand migration routes and geographic patterns of population displacements in overwintering areas. Thanks to the collaboration between different projects (PRIN, LIFE+ LIFE11/NAT/IT068), we tracked lesser kestrels equipped with GPS/UHF and GLS devices and we analyzed the migration data of more than 20 individuals breeding in different populations of Sicily (Gela Plain) and Southern Italy (Altamura, Gravina). The weights of comp…

Migration wintering Falco naumanni Italy Movement ecology Satellite telemetrySettore BIO/05 - Zoologia
researchProduct

First evidence by satellite telemetry of lanner falcon's falco biarmicus feldeggii natal dispersal outside sicily, and a review of existing data

2019

The Italian population of the threatened European Lanner Falcon is mainly sedentary. Thanks to satellite telemetry, we recorded the first evidence on natal dispersal of a juvenile male (Falc36) outside Sicily. Falc36 was deployed with a GPS-GSM device in May 2017, after an initial phase of movements close to the natal cliff and of short wandering in Sicily crossed the Messina Strait in mid July and arrived in Apulia (south Italy). There we were able to follow his displacements and settling until the end of November when the transmitter broke up. Falc36 used mainly open habitats composed of arable field and heterogeneous agricultural areas firstly north of Altamura and Gravina, and from late…

Settore BIO/05 - ZoologiaLanner satellite telemetry Natal dispersal
researchProduct

Food predictability determines space use of endangered vultures: implications for management of supplementary feeding.

2013

Understanding space use of free-living endangered animals is key to inform management decisions for conservation planning. Like most scavengers, vultures have evolved under a context of unpredictability of food resources (i.e. exploiting scattered carcasses that are intermittently available). However, the role of predictable sources of food in shaping spatial ecology of vultures has seldom been studied in detail. Here, we quantify the home range of the Egyptian vulture (Neophron percnopterus), a long-lived raptor which has experienced severe population decline throughout its range and is qualified as endangered worldwide. To this end six adults were tracked by satellite telemetry in Spain d…

Utilization distributionConservation of Natural ResourcesRange (biology)Home rangeVulture restaurantsEndangered speciesContext (language use)Utilization distributionConservationBirdsbiology.animalZoologiaSpatial ecologyAnimalsCarrionZoologíaFalconiformesVultureEcologybiologyEcologyAnimal FeedHome rangeGeographySpainNeophron percnopterusSatellite telemetryKernel density estimatorsResource utilization functions
researchProduct

Individual habitat transitions of Atlantic herring Clupea harengus in a human-modified coastal system

2015

Published version of an article from the journal: Marine Ecology Progress Series. Also available from Inter Research. Http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/meps11103 Pelagic marine fish often display highly dynamic migration patterns. However, such movement behaviour is usually studied at the population or school level, while less is known about individual movement characteristics and habitat transitions. During March 2012 to June 2013, we used acoustic tags and moored receivers to monitor the behaviour of Atlantic herring Clupea harengus L. (N = 47) throughout a range of habitats on the Skagerrak coast in southern Norway. Five of the tagged herring entered a former lake transformed into an artificial …

VDP::Agriculture and fishery disciplines: 900::Fisheries science: 920Atlantic herringgeographyeducation.field_of_studygeography.geographical_feature_categorySchooling fishEcologybiologyPopulationMovement behaviourEstuaryPelagic zoneFjordShoaling and schoolingClupeaAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationSkagerrakFisheryOceanographyHerringAcoustic telemetryeducationMigrationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMarine Ecology Progress Series
researchProduct

DIEL ACTIVITY AND HOME RANGE OF THE WHITE SEABREAM DIPLODUS SARGUS SARGUS (LINNAEUS, 1758) IN THE GULF OF CASTELLAMMARE (NW SICILY)

2011

acoustic telemetry home range white seabream Diplodus sargus sargus Tyrrhenian Sea
researchProduct

Regional and age-dependent differences in the effect of wind on the migratory routes of Eleonora's Falcon.

2015

During migration, birds can show different responses to wind in relation to distance to the goal, experience, ecological barriers and visibility of landmarks. We analysed the effect of wind (tailwinds and crosswinds) on daily movement rates (forward and perpendicular) of Eleonora’s falcons using ARGOS satellite telemetry, during their trans-continental autumn migration to Madagascar, in relation to the different crossed regions and individuals’ age class. Our results showed that the effect of wind on daily movement rates was not uniform, being stronger in the farthest region from the migration goal, the Sahara desert, with adults being more affected than juveniles in this region. In the Sah…

biologyRaptorsEcologySatellite telemetryAge dependentbiology.organism_classificationBiodiversitatFood resourcesGeographyOrientationZoologiaAfricaSatellite telemetryAnimal Science and ZoologyZoologíaPhysical geographyWind driftMigrationWind driftFalco eleonoraeCrosswind
researchProduct

The Usefulness of Biometrics for the Study of Avian Connectivity within Europe. A Case Study with BlackcapsSylvia atricapillain Spain

2012

Summary. The use of biometrics in studies of migratory connectivity is still relatively infrequent in Europe. This is partly due to the fact that biometrics is a less accurate tool when compared to ringing recovery data, or such techniques as stable isotope analyses, use of geolocators or satellite telemetry. Combination with one of these (recovery data) allows us to test the usefulness of biometrics in connectivity analyses, as well as to evaluate/quantify the influence of migratory behaviour on phenotypic traits such as flight morphology. We used historical recovery data, together with flight morphology data obtained from a consistent collection protocol during a three-year ringing progra…

education.field_of_studyGeographyBiometricsSatellite telemetryPopulationAnimal Science and ZoologyRingingeducationCartographyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsArdeola
researchProduct

Data from: Harvest selection on multiple traits in the wild revealed by aquatic animal telemetry

2019

Harvesting can have profound impacts on the ecology and evolution of marine populations. However, little is known about the strength and direction of fisheries-induced selection acting on multiple traits in the wild. Here, we used acoustic telemetry to directly monitor individual behavior and fate in an intensively harvested species, the European lobster (Homarus gammarus, n = 100), in southern Norway. Overall, 24% of the tracked lobsters survived the two-month harvest season within the study area. Our results indicated that local survival was not random with respect to phenotype. We found no clear support for fisheries-induced selection acting directly on body size. However, lobsters with …

medicine and health careAquatic animal telemetryAnthropoceneLife SciencesMedicineHomarus gammarusFisheries induced selectionHarvest selection
researchProduct

Natal Dispersal of First Winter Peregrine Falcons

2017

Quantitative information about natal dispersal is available for many species, usually focused on their long-distance migration. Basic information on non-migrant Peregrine falcons is virtually lacking, despite the amount of scientific data on this species, and the sensitivity of this stage in the Peregrines’ life history. Information on movements is crucial for the definition of young post-fledging areas, the behaviour of floaters and also gives key information about juvenile mortality. Thanks to satellite telemetry, we were able to provide data about the destiny, movement and habitat use during both the phase of post-fledging dependence by parents (PFDP) and the dispersal period of 14 Peregr…

satellite telemetry movement ecology first-winter peregrineSettore BIO/05 - Zoologia
researchProduct