Journal article
In the belly of the beast: resolving stomach tag data to link temperature, acceleration and feeding in white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias)
Animal Biotelemetry, Vol.3(1)
2015
Abstract
Motion detecting archival data loggers such as accelerometers have become increasingly important in animal biotelemetry and offer unique insights into animal behavior, energetics, and kinematics. However, challenges remain for successful deployment and interpretation of data from captive and wild animals. Accelerometer sensors require being packaged in an archival tag that has a firm attachment in a fixed (known) orientation to accurately measure the relevant motion of the animal. This requirement can lead to handling stress and attachment techniques that can affect the tagged animal’s natural behavior and welfare, and lead to behavioral artifacts in the data. Accelerometer data also require careful interpretation to correctly identify behavioral events of interest such as foraging. For endothermic species, changes in stomach temperature can produce temperature signatures indicative of foraging events. In this paper, we present a novel method for recording foraging events in free-swimming white sharks.
Details
- Title
- In the belly of the beast: resolving stomach tag data to link temperature, acceleration and feeding in white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias)
- Authors/Creators
- S.J. Jorgensen (Author/Creator) - California State University, Monterey BayA.C. Gleiss (Author/Creator) - Stanford UniversityP.E. Kanive (Author/Creator) - Montana State UniversityT.K. Chapple (Author/Creator) - Stanford UniversityS.D. Anderson (Author/Creator) - California State University, Monterey BayJ.M. Ezcurra (Author/Creator) - California State University, Monterey BayW.T. Brandt (Author/Creator) - Stanford UniversityB.A. Block (Author/Creator) - Stanford University
- Publication Details
- Animal Biotelemetry, Vol.3(1)
- Publisher
- BioMed Central
- Identifiers
- 991005539580207891
- Copyright
- © Jorgensen et al. 2015
- Murdoch Affiliation
- Murdoch University
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
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