New technologies have vastly increased the available data on animal movement and behaviour. Consequently, new methods deciphering the spatial and temporal interactions between individuals and their environments are vital. Network analyses offer a powerful suite of tools to disentangle the complexity within these dynamic systems, and we review these tools, their application, and how they have generated new ecological and behavioural insights. We suggest that network theory can be used to model and predict the influence of ecological and environmental parameters on animal movement, focusing on spatial and social connectivity, with fundamental implications for conservation. Refining how we construct and randomise spatial networks at different ...
Animal movement acts at multiple scales: it can shape the destiny of individuals and populations, go...
A major goal shared by neuroscience and collective behavior is to understand how dynamic interaction...
While the mechanistic links between animal movement and population dynamics are ecologically obvious...
New technologies have vastly increased the available data on animal movement and behaviour. Conseque...
Animal movement patterns are increasingly analysed as spatial networks. Currently, structures of com...
Ecologists regularly use animal contact networks to describe interactions underlying pathogen transm...
1. Understanding how animal movements change across space and time is a fundamental question in ecol...
Landscape connectivity, the extent to which a landscape facilitates the flow of ecological processes...
Abstract The theory of collective motion and the study of animal social networks have, each individu...
Animal social network is the key to understand many ecological and epidemiological processes. We use...
Interactions among individual animals - and between these individuals and their environment - yield ...
Animal movement has been the focus on much theoretical and empirical work in ecology over the last 2...
Animal social network is the key to understand many ecological and epidemiological pro-cesses. We us...
Animal movement acts at multiple scales: it can shape the destiny of individuals and populations, go...
Recent advances in technology and quantitative methods have led to the emergence of a new field of s...
Animal movement acts at multiple scales: it can shape the destiny of individuals and populations, go...
A major goal shared by neuroscience and collective behavior is to understand how dynamic interaction...
While the mechanistic links between animal movement and population dynamics are ecologically obvious...
New technologies have vastly increased the available data on animal movement and behaviour. Conseque...
Animal movement patterns are increasingly analysed as spatial networks. Currently, structures of com...
Ecologists regularly use animal contact networks to describe interactions underlying pathogen transm...
1. Understanding how animal movements change across space and time is a fundamental question in ecol...
Landscape connectivity, the extent to which a landscape facilitates the flow of ecological processes...
Abstract The theory of collective motion and the study of animal social networks have, each individu...
Animal social network is the key to understand many ecological and epidemiological processes. We use...
Interactions among individual animals - and between these individuals and their environment - yield ...
Animal movement has been the focus on much theoretical and empirical work in ecology over the last 2...
Animal social network is the key to understand many ecological and epidemiological pro-cesses. We us...
Animal movement acts at multiple scales: it can shape the destiny of individuals and populations, go...
Recent advances in technology and quantitative methods have led to the emergence of a new field of s...
Animal movement acts at multiple scales: it can shape the destiny of individuals and populations, go...
A major goal shared by neuroscience and collective behavior is to understand how dynamic interaction...
While the mechanistic links between animal movement and population dynamics are ecologically obvious...