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Improved behavioral inferencing from biologging tags through magnetometry
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Improved behavioral inferencing from biologging tags through magnetometry

Seth Cones, Youenn Jézéquel, T. Aran Mooney, Sierra Jarriel, Amenya Jean, Laura McDonnell, Camrin Braun, Jorge Fontes, Pedro Afonso, Laurent Chauvaud, …
Animal biotelemetry, Vol.13(1), 36
2025
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CC BY-NC-ND V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography Bioinformatics Biomedical and Life Sciences Conservation Biology/Ecology Freshwater & Marine Ecology Life Sciences Methodology Terrestial Ecology
Wearable technology is now a primary tool for studying animal movement ecology, enabling key insights into species’ migrations, ecophysiology, and interactions across diverse taxa. However, using sensors to identify specific movement behaviors remains challenging without direct visual observations of the tagged animal. This difficultly arises because sensors only measure movement from a single point on the body, providing limited information about the underlying whole-body kinematics that contribute to behaviors. Although magnetometers are commonly limited to orientation data, we show they can be used to identify and describe the motions of spatially-isolated body appendages via an adhered magnet. Variations in magnetic field strength can then be linked to peripheral body movements to directly measure key behaviors. To illustrate the broad potential of this approach, we conducted four experiments with taxonomically diverse animals, providing measurements of ventilation rates in flounder, scallop valve angles, shark foraging, and squid propulsion. For each species, changes in magnetic field strength were correlated with appendage position to identify and characterize important behaviors that are difficult to measure with traditional tagging approaches. This novel method revealed that scallops modulated valve opening angles on a circadian rhythm. Similarly, flounder operculum beat rate occurred at 0.5 Hz, with most beats reaching only a few degrees in magnitude. When applied to a shark, magnetometry quantified jaw angle and chewing events while foraging. Finally, for a mobile epi- and mesopelagic squid, magnetometry revealed three prominent and coordinated fin and jet propulsion movements during high acceleration swimming. This method leverages comparatively small magnets to enable new measurements on fragile and diminutive structures. Magnetometry expands the scope for exploring new ecological and biomechanical questions in a previously understudied size class of marine species.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
3.35 Zoology & Animal Ecology
3.35.796 Marine Mammal Ecology
Web Of Science research areas
Biodiversity Conservation
Ecology
Marine & Freshwater Biology
ESI research areas
Environment/Ecology
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