Title
Correcting for missing and irregular data in home-range estimation
Author(s)
Fleming, C.H.;Sheldon, D.;Fagan, W.F.;Leimgruber, P.;Mueller, T.;Nandintsetseg, D.;Noonan, M J.;Olson, K.A.;Setyawan, E.;Sianipar, A.;Calabrese, J.M.
Published
2018
Publisher
Ecological Applications
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.1704
Abstract
Home-range estimation is an important application of animal tracking data that is frequently complicated by autocorrelation, sampling irregularity, and small effective sample sizes. We introduce a novel, optimal weighting method that accounts for temporal sampling bias in autocorrelated tracking data. This method corrects for irregular and missing data, such that oversampled times are downweighted and undersampled times are upweighted to minimize error in the home-range estimate. We also introduce computationally efficient algorithms that make this method feasible with large data sets. Generally speaking, there are three situations where weight optimization improves the accuracy of home-range estimates: with marine data, where the sampling schedule is highly irregular, with duty cycled data, where the sampling schedule changes during the observation period, and when a small number of home-range crossings are observed, making the beginning and end times more independent and informative than the intermediate times. Using both simulated data and empirical examples including reef manta ray, Mongolian gazelle, and African buffalo, optimal weighting is shown to reduce the error and increase the spatial resolution of home-range estimates. With a conveniently packaged and computationally efficient software implementation, this method broadens the array of data sets with which accurate space-use assessments can be made.
Keywords
animal tracking data;autocorrelation;home range;irregular sampling;kernel density estimation;marine tracking data;utilization;distribution;habitat selection;telemetry data;tracking data;movement data;random-walk;size;error;scale;bias;Environmental Sciences & Ecology

Access Full Text

A full-text copy of this article may be available. Please email the WCS Library to request.




Back

PUB23986