On our planet, at any one moment, billions of animals are on the move. From migratory birds, insects, marine mammals and sharks connecting distant continents and seas, to bees and other insects ...
Somewhere in the northern Rockies, a GPS-collared gray wolf trots along a logging road at 2 a.m., covering ground efficiently ...
The new Icarus satellite is tracking signals hidden in animal behaviour – which could save the lives of cheetahs, rhinos and ...
A new analysis of GPS tracking data from 37 animal species, paired with cellphone location data from across the United States ...
If you’re a farmer with a herd of hundreds of cows, keeping tabs on their whereabouts and wellbeing can be challenging work, but we’ve seen how sensor tags might one day ease the burden. New research ...
Animal movement ecology seeks to understand why, how and where animals move across landscapes and seascapes, integrating behavioural, physiological and environmental drivers. Biotelemetry techniques ...
Many animals, including apex predators, move in groups. We know this collective behavior is fundamental to the animal's ability to move in complex environments, but less is known about what drives the ...
Patterns of animal migration -- Movement and migration in a changing world -- Beyond dispersal: the role of animal movement in modern agricultural landscapes -- Migration and flight strategies in ...
Spatial ecology of animal movements examines how individuals traverse landscapes, how their movements shape and respond to habitat structure, resource distribution and anthropogenic change. This field ...
It’s not acceptable to address the well-being of the planet and humankind while ignoring all other animals, including those raised for food. The environmental movement as we know it today is a lot ...
Young African lions (Panthera leo) on the road in Hluhluwe National Park, South Africa. When they leave their mothers, young male lions have to disperse to find new territories. To do this, they ...