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  1. Population connectivity, which is essential for the persistence of benthic marine metapopulations, depends on how life history traits and the environment interact to influence larval production, dispersal and ...

    Authors: Eric A. Treml, John R. Ford, Kerry P. Black and Stephen E. Swearer
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:17
  2. Paired with satellite location telemetry, animal-borne instruments can collect spatiotemporal data describing the animal’s movement and environment at a scale relevant to its behavior.

    Authors: Laurie L Baker, Joanna E Mills Flemming, Ian D Jonsen, Damian C Lidgard, Sara J Iverson and W Don Bowen
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:20
  3. The Brownian bridge movement model (BBMM) provides a biologically sound approximation of the movement path of an animal based on discrete location data, and is a powerful method to quantify utilization distrib...

    Authors: Kevin Buchin, Stef Sijben, E Emiel van Loon, Nir Sapir, Stéphanie Mercier, T Jean Marie Arseneau and Erik P Willems
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:18
  4. A population of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) spends the austral summer feeding on Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) along the Western Antarctic Peninsula (WAP). These whales acquire their annual ene...

    Authors: Corrie Curtice, David W Johnston, Hugh Ducklow, Nick Gales, Patrick N Halpin and Ari S Friedlaender
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:13
  5. Free ranging foraging animals can vary their searching intensity in response to the profitability of the environment by modifying their movements. Marine diving animals forage in a three dimensional space and ...

    Authors: Virginie Ramasco, Frédéric Barraquand, Martin Biuw, Bernie McConnell and Kjell T Nilssen
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:15
  6. Animal movement patterns in space and time are a central aspect of animal ecology. Remotely-sensed environmental indices can play a key role in understanding movement patterns by providing contiguous, relative...

    Authors: Wiebke Neumann, Sebastian Martinuzzi, Anna B Estes, Anna M Pidgeon, Holger Dettki, Göran Ericsson and Volker C Radeloff
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:8
  7. An adaption of the optimal foraging theory suggests that herbivores deplete, depart, and finally return to foraging patches leaving time for regrowth [van Moorter et al., Oikos 118:641–652, 2009]. Inter-patch ...

    Authors: Dana P Seidel and Mark S Boyce
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:7
  8. The spatial distribution of forage resources is a major driver of animal movement patterns. Understanding where animals forage is important for the conservation of multi-species communities, since interspecifi...

    Authors: Anna K Schweiger, Martin Schütz, Pia Anderwald, Michael E Schaepman, Mathias Kneubühler, Rudolf Haller and Anita C Risch
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:6
  9. The processes that cause and influence movement are one of the main points of enquiry in movement ecology. However, ecology is not the only discipline interested in movement: a number of information sciences a...

    Authors: Urška Demšar, Kevin Buchin, Francesca Cagnacci, Kamran Safi, Bettina Speckmann, Nico Van de Weghe, Daniel Weiskopf and Robert Weibel
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:5
  10. Identifying movement routes and stopover sites is necessary for developing effective management and conservation strategies for migratory animals. In the case of migratory birds, a collection of migration rout...

    Authors: Eric C Palm, Scott H Newman, Diann J Prosser, Xiangming Xiao, Luo Ze, Nyambayar Batbayar, Sivananinthaperumal Balachandran and John Y Takekawa
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:3
  11. Accelerometers are useful tools for biologists seeking to gain a deeper understanding of the daily behavior of cryptic species. We describe how we used GPS and tri-axial accelerometer (sampling at 64 Hz) colla...

    Authors: Yiwei Wang, Barry Nickel, Matthew Rutishauser, Caleb M Bryce, Terrie M Williams, Gabriel Elkaim and Christopher C Wilmers
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:2
  12. Tracking individual animals using satellite telemetry has improved our understanding of animal movements considerably. Nonetheless, thorough statistical treatment of Argos datasets is often jeopardized by thei...

    Authors: Jean-François Therrien, David Pinaud, Gilles Gauthier, Nicolas Lecomte, Keith L Bildstein and Joël Bety
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2015 3:1
  13. The study of animal movement is experiencing rapid progress in recent years, forcefully driven by technological advancement. Biologgers with Acceleration (ACC) recordings are becoming increasingly popular in t...

    Authors: Yehezkel S Resheff, Shay Rotics, Roi Harel, Orr Spiegel and Ran Nathan
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:27
  14. Linking animal movements to landscape features is critical to identify factors that shape the spatial behaviour of animals. Habitat selection is led by behavioural decisions and is shaped by the environment, t...

    Authors: Mirjana Bevanda, Ned Horning, Bjoern Reineking, Marco Heurich, Martin Wegmann and Joerg Mueller
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:26
  15. Animals adjust activity budgets as competing demands for limited time and energy shift across life history phases. For far-ranging migrants and especially pelagic seabirds, activity during breeding and migrati...

    Authors: Sarah E Gutowsky, Lee FG Gutowsky, Ian D Jonsen, Marty L Leonard, Maura B Naughton, Marc D Romano and Scott A Shaffer
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:23
  16. Little is known about migration patterns and seasonal distribution away from coastal summer feeding habitats of many pelagic baleen whales. Recently, large-scale passive acoustic monitoring networks have becom...

    Authors: Denise Risch, Manuel Castellote, Christopher W Clark, Genevieve E Davis, Peter J Dugan, Lynne EW Hodge, Anurag Kumar, Klaus Lucke, David K Mellinger, Sharon L Nieukirk, Cristian Marian Popescu, Christian Ramp, Andrew J Read, Aaron N Rice, Monica A Silva, Ursula Siebert…
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:24
  17. Animal movement is essential to our understanding of population dynamics, animal behavior, and the impacts of global change. Coupled with high-resolution biotelemetry data, exciting new inferences about animal...

    Authors: Brett T McClintock, Devin S Johnson, Mevin B Hooten, Jay M Ver Hoef and Juan M Morales
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:21
  18. Windscapes affect energy costs for flying animals, but animals can adjust their behavior to accommodate wind-induced energy costs. Theory predicts that flying animals should decrease air speed to compensate fo...

    Authors: Kyle Hamish Elliott, Lorraine S Chivers, Lauren Bessey, Anthony J Gaston, Scott A Hatch, Akiko Kato, Orla Osborne, Yan Ropert-Coudert, John R Speakman and James F Hare
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:17
  19. Migratory species face numerous threats related to human encroachment and climate change. Several migratory populations are declining and individuals are losing their migratory behaviour. To understand how hab...

    Authors: Mael Le Corre, Christian Dussault and Steeve D Côté
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:19
  20. Dispersal of pollen and seeds are essential functions of plant species, with far-reaching demographic, ecological and evolutionary consequences. Interest in plant dispersal has increased with concerns about th...

    Authors: Juan J Robledo-Arnuncio, Etienne K Klein, Helene C Muller-Landau and Luis Santamaría
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:16
  21. Dispersal has a critical influence on demography and gene flow and as such maintaining connectivity between populations is an essential element of modern conservation. Advances in satellite radiotelemetry are ...

    Authors: Joshua Killeen, Henrik Thurfjell, Simone Ciuti, Dale Paton, Marco Musiani and Mark S Boyce
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:15
  22. Foraging movements of animals shape their efficiency in finding food and their exposure to the environment while doing so. Our goal was to test the optimal foraging theory prediction that territorial acorn woo...

    Authors: Pamela G Thompson, Peter E Smouse, Douglas G Scofield and Victoria L Sork
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:12
  23. Many animals are known to have improved navigational efficiency when moving together as a social group. One potential mechanism for social group navigation is known as the ‘many wrongs principle’, where inform...

    Authors: Edward A Codling and Nikolai WF Bode
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:11
  24. Billions of organisms travel through the air, influencing population dynamics, community interactions, ecosystem services and our lives in many different ways. Yet monitoring these movements are technically ve...

    Authors: Judy Shamoun-Baranes, Jose A Alves, Silke Bauer, Adriaan M Dokter, Ommo Hüppop, Jarmo Koistinen, Hidde Leijnse, Felix Liechti, Hans van Gasteren and Jason W Chapman
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:9
  25. How foragers move across the landscape to search for resources and obtain energy is a central issue in ecology. Direct energetic quantification of animal movements allows for testing optimal foraging theory pr...

    Authors: Maite Louzao, Thorsten Wiegand, Frederic Bartumeus and Henri Weimerskirch
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:8
  26. Seed dispersal alters gene flow, reproduction, migration and ultimately spatial organization of dryland ecosystems. Because many seeds in drylands lack adaptations for long-distance dispersal, seed transport b...

    Authors: Sally E Thompson, Shmuel Assouline, Li Chen, Ana Trahktenbrot, Tal Svoray and Gabriel G Katul
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:7

    The Correction article to this article has been published in Movement Ecology 2014 2:14

  27. Animal-borne accelerometers measure body orientation and movement and can thus be used to classify animal behaviour. To univocally and automatically analyse the large volume of data generated, we need classifi...

    Authors: Roeland A Bom, Willem Bouten, Theunis Piersma, Kees Oosterbeek and Jan A van Gils
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:6
  28. This study investigates the ranging behavior of elephants in relation to precipitation-driven dynamics of vegetation. Movement data were acquired for five bachelors and five female family herds during three ye...

    Authors: Gil Bohrer, Pieter SA Beck, Shadrack M Ngene, Andrew K Skidmore and Ian Douglas-Hamilton
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:2
  29. The primary focus of studies examining metapopulation processes in dynamic or disturbance-dependent landscapes has been related to spatiotemporal changes in the habitat patches themselves. However, like the ha...

    Authors: Sara L Zeigler and William F Fagan
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2014 2:1
  30. Adaptive movement behaviors allow individuals to respond to fluctuations in resource quality and distribution in order to maintain fitness. Classically, studies of the interaction between ecological conditions...

    Authors: Leo Polansky, Iain Douglas-Hamilton and George Wittemyer
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2013 1:13
  31. Leatherback turtles are renowned for their trans-oceanic migrations. However, despite numerous movement studies, the precise drivers of movement patterns in leatherbacks remain elusive. Many previous studies o...

    Authors: Robert S Schick, Jason J Roberts, Scott A Eckert, Patrick N Halpin, Helen Bailey, Fei Chai, Lei Shi and James S Clark
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2013 1:11
  32. Conservation strategies derived from research carried out in one part of the range of a widely distributed species and then uniformly applied over multiple regions risk being ineffective due to regional variat...

    Authors: Nicole Davies, Galina Gramotnev, Leonie Seabrook, Adrian Bradley, Greg Baxter, Jonathan Rhodes, Daniel Lunney and Clive McAlpine
    Citation: Movement Ecology 2013 1:8