Recent studies have demonstrated the high potential of drones as tools to facilitate wildlife radio-tracking in rugged, difficult-to-access terrain. Without estimates of accuracy, however, data obtained from receivers attached to drones will be of limited use. We estimated transmitter location errors from a drone-borne VHF (very high frequency) receiver in a hilly and dense boreal forest in southern Québec, Canada. Transmitters and the drone-borne receiver were part of the Motus radio-tracking system, a collaborative network designed to study animal movements at local to continental scales. We placed five transmitters at fixed locations, 1⁻2 m above ground, and flew a quadrotor drone over them along linear segments, at distances ...
1. Radio-tag signals from fixed-position antennas are most often used to indicate presence/absence o...
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are increasingly important in wildlife data collection but concern o...
Interpretation of habitat use from GPS collar locations could be biased if the activity of animals w...
Radio telemetry is a critical technique in conservation ecology, particularly for studying the movem...
1. The majority of bird and bat species are incapable of carrying tags that transmit their position ...
Aerial telemetry is commonly used to locate wildlife in remote areas (Gilmer et al. 1981, White and ...
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have enormous potentials for several important applications, such as...
Localizing ground devices (GDs) is an important requirement for a wide variety of applications, such...
Recent advances in using Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) to study wildlife offer promise and may impr...
Lightweight drones have emerged recently as a remote sensing survey tool of choice for ecologists, c...
Widely ranging raptors are difficult to radio-track from fixed locations on the ground; therefore, w...
Due to the costs of related technologies, tracking studies typically use low numbers of animals as r...
The use of amateur drones (ADrs) is expected to significantly increase over the upcoming years. Howe...
Animal tracking through Argos satellite telemetry has enormous potential to test hypotheses in anima...
1. Radio-tag signals from fixed-position antennas are most often used to indicate presence/absence o...
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are increasingly important in wildlife data collection but concern o...
Interpretation of habitat use from GPS collar locations could be biased if the activity of animals w...
Radio telemetry is a critical technique in conservation ecology, particularly for studying the movem...
1. The majority of bird and bat species are incapable of carrying tags that transmit their position ...
Aerial telemetry is commonly used to locate wildlife in remote areas (Gilmer et al. 1981, White and ...
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have enormous potentials for several important applications, such as...
Localizing ground devices (GDs) is an important requirement for a wide variety of applications, such...
Recent advances in using Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) to study wildlife offer promise and may impr...
Lightweight drones have emerged recently as a remote sensing survey tool of choice for ecologists, c...
Widely ranging raptors are difficult to radio-track from fixed locations on the ground; therefore, w...
Due to the costs of related technologies, tracking studies typically use low numbers of animals as r...
The use of amateur drones (ADrs) is expected to significantly increase over the upcoming years. Howe...
Animal tracking through Argos satellite telemetry has enormous potential to test hypotheses in anima...
1. Radio-tag signals from fixed-position antennas are most often used to indicate presence/absence o...
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are increasingly important in wildlife data collection but concern o...
Interpretation of habitat use from GPS collar locations could be biased if the activity of animals w...