A large-scale automated radio telemetry network for monitoring movements of terrestrial wildlife in Australia

Title
A large-scale automated radio telemetry network for monitoring movements of terrestrial wildlife in Australia
Publication Date
2020
Author(s)
Griffin, Andrea S
Brown, Culum
Woodworth, Bradley K
Ballard, Guy-Anthony
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0287-9720
Email: gballar3@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:gballar3
Blanch, Stuart
Campbell, Hamish A
Crewe, Tara L
Hansbro, Philip M
Herbert, Catherine A
Hosking, Tim
Hoye, Bethany J
Law, Brad
Leigh, Kellie
Machovsky-Capuska, Gabriele E
Rasmussen, Thomas
McDonald, Paul G
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9541-3304
Email: pmcdon21@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:pmcdon21
Roderick, Mick
Slade, Chris
Mackenzie, Stuart A
Taylor, Philip D
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales
Place of publication
Australia
DOI
10.7882/AZ.2019.026
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/28316
Abstract
Technologies for remotely observing animal movements have advanced rapidly in the past decade. In recent years, Australia has invested in an Integrated Marine Ocean Tracking (IMOS) system, a land ecosystem observatory (TERN), and an Australian Acoustic Observatory (A2O), but has not established movement tracking systems for individual terrestrial animals across land and along coastlines. Here, we make the case that the Motus Wildlife Tracking System, an open-source, rapidly expanding cooperative automated radio-tracking global network (Motus, https://motus.org) provides an unprecedented opportunity to build an affordable and proven infrastructure that will boost wildlife biology research and connect Australian researchers domestically and with international wildlife research. We briefly describe the system conceptually and technologically, then present the unique strengths of Motus, how Motus can complement and expand existing and emerging animal tracking systems, and how the Motus framework provides a much-needed central repository and impetus for archiving and sharing animal telemetry data. We propose ways to overcome the unique challenges posed by Australia's ecological attributes and the size of its scientific community. Open source, inherently cooperative and flexible, Motus provides a unique opportunity to leverage individual research effort into a larger collaborative achievement, thereby expanding the scale and scope of individual projects, while maximising the outcomes of scant research and conservation funding.
Link
Citation
Australian Zoologist, 40(3), p. 379-391
ISSN
2204-2105
0067-2238
Start page
379
End page
391

Files:

NameSizeformatDescriptionLink