2019
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210x.13261
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UAV wildlife radiotelemetry: System and methods of localization

Abstract: The majority of bird and bat species are incapable of carrying tags that transmit their position to satellites. Given fundamental power requirements for such communication, burdened mass guidelines and battery technology, this constraint necessitates the continued use of very high frequency (VHF) radio beacons. As such, efforts should be made to mitigate their primary deficiencies: detection range, localization time and localization accuracy. The integration of a radiotelemetry system with an unmanned aerial v… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…VHF tracking is labor intensive (it might take a day to locate an animal) and has limited coverage (a few hundred meters around smaller tags). Drone-based VHF triangulation has been trialed to avoid the difficulties of manual radio tracking (Cliff et al 2018 , Shafer et al 2019 ). Automated triangulation can be performed with fixed receivers (e.g., Kays et al 2011 ).…”
Section: Wildlife Trackingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…VHF tracking is labor intensive (it might take a day to locate an animal) and has limited coverage (a few hundred meters around smaller tags). Drone-based VHF triangulation has been trialed to avoid the difficulties of manual radio tracking (Cliff et al 2018 , Shafer et al 2019 ). Automated triangulation can be performed with fixed receivers (e.g., Kays et al 2011 ).…”
Section: Wildlife Trackingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wildlife tracking technology can also be prohibitively expensive, especially with the need to acquire many devices to track a big number of individuals. Fortunately, high-resolution satellite imagery and wildlife tracking technology are becoming increasingly cheap, accessible and high quality [64][65][66][67]. Technological developments are facilitating an increasingly high spatio-temporal resolution to our combined wildlife tracking-remote sensing approach to monitor rewilding progress.…”
Section: Plos Onementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Firstly, there has been very limited testing on animals, with tagging to date almost exclusively restricted to avian species (Cliff, Fitch, Sukkarieh, Saunders, & Heinsohn, 2015; Tremblay, Desrochers, Aubry, Pace, & Bird, 2017). Furthermore, many studies are limited to single tag testing (Bayram, Stefas, & Isler, 2018; Dos Santos et al., 2014; Körner et al., 2010; Shafer et al, 2019), and thus, their ability to track movements when multiple animals are tagged remains unknown. Furthermore, none of the studies have utilized or tested their systems on fixed‐wing UAVs.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, researchers have begun to explore the potential benefits of UAV-based radio tracking systems (hereon referred to as UAVRTS) compared to conventional methods. However, as Shafer, Vega, Rothfus, and Flikkema (2019) note, many of the presented systems exist primarily as proof-of-principle concepts. The prime focus in most of these studies is the refinement of the localization methods employed.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%