ORCID Profile
0000-0001-6178-4935
Current Organisation
Alaska Marine Science Association, LLC
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Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 04-10-2019
DOI: 10.1186/S40317-019-0182-6
Abstract: Pinnipeds spend large portions of their lives at sea, submerged, or hauled-out on land, often on remote off-shore islands. This fundamentally limits access by researchers to critical parts of pinniped life history and has spurred the development and implementation of a variety of externally attached telemetry devices (ETDs) to collect information about movement patterns, physiology and ecology of marine animals when they cannot be directly observed. ETDs are less invasive and easier to apply than implanted internal devices, making them more widely used. However, ETDs have limited retention times and their use may result in negative short- and long-term consequences including capture myopathy, impacts to energetics, behavior, and entanglement risk. We identify 15 best practice recommendations for the use of ETDs with pinnipeds that address experimental justification, animal capture, tag design, tag attachment, effects assessments, preparation, and reporting. Continued improvement of best practices is critical within the framework of the Three Rs (Reduction, Refinement, Replacement) these best practice recommendations provide current guidance to mitigate known potential negative outcomes for in iduals and local populations. These recommendations were developed specifically for pinnipeds however, they may also be applicable to studies of other marine taxa. We conclude with four desired future directions for the use of ETDs in technology development, validation studies, experimental designs and data sharing.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 06-2016
DOI: 10.1016/J.TREE.2016.02.015
Abstract: It is a golden age for animal movement studies and so an opportune time to assess priorities for future work. We assembled 40 experts to identify key questions in this field, focussing on marine megafauna, which include a broad range of birds, mammals, reptiles, and fish. Research on these taxa has both underpinned many of the recent technical developments and led to fundamental discoveries in the field. We show that the questions have broad applicability to other taxa, including terrestrial animals, flying insects, and swimming invertebrates, and, as such, this exercise provides a useful roadmap for targeted deployments and data syntheses that should advance the field of movement ecology.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 04-2013
Location: United States of America
Location: United States of America
Location: Germany
No related grants have been discovered for Markus Horning.