Biotelemetry and Biologging Flashcards

1
Q

Active Transmitters

A

Electronic tags that have their own energy source.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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2
Q

What are the similarities and differences between biotelemetry and biologging?

A

Both techniques involve remotely monitoring behavioural, physical, or environmental information, but in biotelemetry a signal from a transmitter carried by the animal sends the information to a receiver whereas in biologging the information is recorded and stored in an animal-borne device and the information is downloaded after the logger is recovered.

(Cooke et al, 2012)

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3
Q

What are the disadvantages of biotelemetry and biologging?

A

Costly

Obtaining an adequate sample size of independent data for strong statistical power and to make population level inferences can be difficult on a limited budget.

Large dataset can be difficult and take a long time to interpret.

Special skills needed.

(Cooke et al, 2012)

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4
Q

What is biotelemetry data used for?

A

This location information provides insight into migration, habitat use, behaviour, productivity, and survival.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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5
Q

What are two basic categories of biotelemetry?

A

Acoustic or radio.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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6
Q

What are the advantages of biotelemetry and biologging?

A
  1. The ability to ID individual animals.
  2. The ability to locate individual animals without having to observe or recapture them.
  3. A variety of detailed information can be collected over time (e.g., location, depth, activity, environmental parameters) without the need to recapture or directly observe the animal.
  4. Allows the collection of data in harsh/inaccessible conditions.
  5. Good for studying endangered animals because they are relatively noninvasive, are data rich for small sample sizes, and do not require the permanent removal of animal from their natural environment.
  6. Allows us to couple behaviour with other variables such as physiology.
  7. Provides realism not possible in lab.

(Adams et al, 2012; Cooke et al, 2012)

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7
Q

What types of studies can be performed using telemetry? Provide an example and benefit of each.

A

Descriptive
- Determine unknown life history aspects.
- e.g., movements or spawning times and locations.

Correlative
- Relationships between measured variables.
- e.g., temperature and residency

Manipulative
- Can provide evidence to support or reject a hypothesis.
- e.g., controlling temperature to see impacts on animal.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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8
Q

Compare and contrast the benefits of using acoustic/radio telemetry to the other.

A

Radio usually used in FW because of advantages in antenna size and reception.

Acoustic used in SW because of higher water conductivity.

Radio tags can be tracked from greater distances by a range of methods (e.g., land, boat, air) whereas submerged hydrophones are needed for acoustic tags which limit reception range when tracking by boat or fixed data logger stations.

Acoustic is excellent for deep water and radio isn’t.

Radio is better for turbid water as well as water that is heavily vegetated, has algae, or is turbulent.

Acoustic you can get actual positions, radio is just general.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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9
Q

Location Error

A

The linear distance between the actual and estimated location.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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10
Q

What are common errors with telemetry?

A

Location error, false positives, and false negatives.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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11
Q

What trade-offs (advantages/disadvantages) need to be considered when selecting radio and acoustic transmitters (tags)?

A

Longer operating life of tag:
A - can have a longer-term study
D - tag will be bigger and heavier

Higher range of tag:
A - bigger signal range and study scale as well as higher likelihood of detecting the animal
D - tag will be bigger and heavier

Smaller tag size:
A - can study smaller fish as well as those at earlier life stages
D - tag won’t last as long or have as far a range

Tag with internal antenna (radio):
A - less impact from tag on fish and easier operation
D - reduced range and tag will be bigger and heavier

Tags that have sensors to take different measurements (e.g., temperature):
A - will gather more information including both positioning and environmental data
D - tag will be bigger and heavier

Tags with activity/mortality circuit:
A - useful for monitoring life of fish
D - tag will be bigger and heavier

(Adams et al, 2012)

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12
Q

What is an assumption of almost all telemetry studies?

Aka what is the fundamental principle of all telemetry studies.

A

The tagged animals are representative of the untagged population, i.e., that the processes by which study animals are captured, handled, and tagged, as well as the act of carrying a transmitter, will have minimal effect on their behaviour and performance.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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13
Q

How can tagging fish impact them?

A

Direct physical impacts: elevated stress levels, injury, death.

Interrupted integrity of scales, mucus, or skin can increase infection risk.

Altered buoyancy compensation ability.

Reduced swimming performance.

Reduced feeding.

Changes in dominance status.

Changes in above behaviours can impact growth, rate of maturation or migration, or increase vulnerability to predation.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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14
Q

Tag Burden

A

Transmitter to body-weight ratio.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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15
Q

What tag burden is most commonly accepted?

A

The transmitter in air should not exceed 2% of fish body weight in air.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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16
Q

Tagger Effects

A

Different outcomes that are the result of different taggers being used in a study.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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17
Q

What are the 3 most common methods for transmitter attachment?

A

External attachment, gastric implantation, and surgical implantation.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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18
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of external transmitter attachment?

A

A’s

Executed quickly, light or no anesthesia, no attenuation of signal by fish body wall or internal organs, can be retrieved without recapture (e.g., pop-up tags), and external sensors accommodated.

D’s

Risk of fouling, entanglement or transmitter loss, source of drag/swimming affected, irritation/infection at attachment site, balance affected if asymmetric, not ok for growing fish.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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19
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of gastric implantation of transmitters?

A

A’s

Executed quickly, light or no anesthesia, position at centre of balance, low risk of entanglement/drag, low risk of infection, some sensors accommodated.

D’s

Interference with cessation of feeding, cough response, rupture of stomach, regurgitation or egestion of transmitter, irritation at attachment/exit site.

(Adams et al, 2012)

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20
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of surgical implantation of transmitters?

A

A’s

Position at centre of balance, no entanglement or drag, internal sensors accommodated, allows long-term monitoring.

D’s

Relatively slower procedure, biologically invasive, deep anesthesia, required a skilled surgeon/tagger, risk of active/passive expulsion, risk of infection, irritation at radio antenna exit site (when used).

(Adams et al, 2012)

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21
Q

Where is radio telemetry primarily used? Why?

A

Freshwater because it has a lower conductivity than saltwater so it absorbs less radio waves.

(Adams et al, 2012)

22
Q

What are the components of radio telemetry gear and what do they do?

A

Transmitter (tag) - goes on animal and emits radio signal.

Receiving antenna - receives radio signal and changes it into a voltage that can be recognized by receiver.

Receiver - converts signal from antenna into an audible or electronic form that can be used to ID the animal.

Data logger - receives/stores data when operator not present.

(Adams et al, 2012)

23
Q

Why is conductivity important in fish telemetry?

A

Radio waves are absorbed (attenuated) relative to the conductivity of the material.

(Adams et al, 2012)

24
Q

What is the difference between radio waves in the water versus in the air?

A

A radio wave travels faster through air.

(Adams et al, 2012)

25
Q

What is the most limiting element in a radio telemetry system? Why?

A

The transmitter/tag because the size and weight of it determines the burden it will have on the animal.

(Adams et al, 2012)

26
Q

Pulse Width

A

The length of time the transmitter is on.

(Adams et al, 2012)

27
Q

Pulse Repetition Rate or Period

A

How often the signal is transmitted from a tag.

(Adams et al, 2012)

28
Q

How does tag weight differ in water versus air?

A

The weight of a tag in water will range from 35% to 65% its weight when in air (i.e., it will be lighter).

(Adams et a, 2012)

29
Q

What reduces signal level in aquatic telemetry?

A

Dispersion, absorption in water, and reflection and refraction at the air/water boundary.

(Adams et al, 2012)

30
Q

What are the advantages of stationary tracking?

A

Continuous coverage - concentrate effort at specific locations of interest; regular access to difficult to access sites.

Can be very effective.

Operates in a large range of environmental conditions.

Overall cheap operationally.

Since sites are standardized, movement rates, timings, and residency can be more easily measured.

(Adams et al, 2012)

31
Q

What types of data does stationary tracking collect?

A

Presence/absence at site

Site passage

Movement rates between sites

(Adams et al, 2012)

32
Q

What are the disadvantages of stationary tracking?

A

Limited to specific site.

Abundant data can be difficult to deal with.

Gear intensive and must be continuously maintained over an extended period.

High initial costs.

(Adams et al, 2012)

33
Q

What are the advantages of mobile tracking?

A

Very flexible - can be adopted to various situations and conditions; can collect a wide variety of data.

Cheaper start-up costs - more feasible for short-term/small-scale studies.

Can collect data over extended areas, limited only by site accessibility.

Minimal gear maintenance.

(Adams et al, 2012)

34
Q

What types of data can be collected using mobile tracking?

A

Location estimates

Movement rates between sites

Movement patterns between sites

Use of transmitter sensors

(Adams et al, 2012)

35
Q

What are the disadvantages of mobile tracking?

A

Intermittent coverage - resolution dependent on time interval between surveys.

Impacted by adverse environmental conditions.

Limited access with boat/foot surveys.

(Adams et al, 2012)

36
Q

What do acoustic tags emit?

A

Tag emits signal consisting of short bursts of sound waves.

(Adams et al, 2012)

37
Q

Why does acoustic telemetry work well in water?

A

Sound propagates well in water and tags can often be detected at significant ranges (up to 1000s of m) with appropriate conditions.

(Adams et al, 2012)

38
Q

What impacts detection range in acoustic telemetry?

A

Spreading loss as distance between transmitter and receiver increases.

Distortion suffered by the signal as it travels through the water (e.g., air bubbles, sediment).

Noise levels at receiver.

(Adams et al, 2012)

39
Q

What is a major advantage of telemetry over mark-recapture?

A

It allows us to observe continuous behavioural processes that determine key life history events.

(Adams et al, 2012)

40
Q

Collisions

A

When pulses from multiple transmitters overlap to form a pattern of intervals identical to that of another valid transmitter creating a false positive.

(Adams et al, 2012)

41
Q

Why are false positives more common in acoustic telemetry than radio telemetry?

A

Acoustic is based on a lower frequency and transmissions travel through water slower and farther, making false positives from multi-path and various sources of noise more common.

(Adams et al, 2012)

42
Q

What are the main advantages and disadvantages of acoustic telemetry?

A

A’s

Effective in deep water, can obtain very detailed movement data, can be deployed as gates/grids, can monitor long-term and under ice, can be used to triangulate animal’s position, and some systems can provide live data.

D’s

Hydrophone must be submerged in water, ineffective in shallow and turbulent water, interference from macrophytes and noise (e.g., air bubbles, boats), large datasets can be difficult to manage.

(Cooke et al, 2013)

43
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of radio telemetry?

A

A’s

Works well in shallow water and water with low conductivity (freshwater), relatively inexpensive, works well in moving water, through ice, and on land in air.

D’s

Doesn’t work as well in deep water, sensitive to local interference, antennas visible to vandals, cannot triangulate positions (mostly just presence/absence), effectiveness dependent on local geomorphology and station placement.

(Cooke et al, 2013)

44
Q

Acoustic Telemetry

A

Telemetry that uses a propagated sound signal in water at frequencies in the range of 20 to 200 kHz; requires a transmitter and submerged hydrophone.

(Zale et al, 2012)

45
Q

Radio Telemetry

A

Telemetry that uses radio-frequency electromagnetic radiation as the means of transmission; requires use of a transmitter, antenna, and receiver.

(Zale et al, 2012)

46
Q

What are the limitations and assumptions of telemetry?

A

Sample represents population.

Transmitters do not significantly alter or impede behaviour, physiology, or survival of tagged individuals.

Telemetry data typically violate the assumption of independence; therefore, statistical approaches must have the ability to handle non-independent data.

Telemetry data tends to be correlated in time and space and this needs to be accounted for during analysis so model assumptions aren’t violated.

(Brownscombe et al, 2019)

47
Q

What is detection efficiency?

A

The capability of a telemetry receiver or array to detect the presence of a transmitter.

(Zale et al, 2012)

48
Q

How can findings from telemetry be used in management?

A

Telemetry provides a science-based understanding of how animals are distributed in space and time relative to physical features.

ID spawning sites, nursery sites, nesting sites, overwintering sites, critical habitat, etc.

Habitat management (protection, enhancement, creation, restoration).

Invasive species management.

Protected areas management.

etc.

(Crossin et al, 2017)

49
Q

How do you design telemetry arrays to get accurate position and directionality?

A

As gates or as triangulation.

(Cooke et al, 2012)

50
Q

Accelerometer

A

A sensor that contains a spring that when deformed, generates a wave-like voltage signal that is proportional to the acceleration (change in velocity) it experiences.

It measures the 3D movement of an animal.

They store logged measurements until the instrument is retrieved.

(Brown et al, 2013)

51
Q

What are the benefits and disadvantages of accelerometers?

A

Using accelerometers, biologists can measure the movement behavior of wild animals over biologically and ecologically significant events and periods, practically unlimited by visibility, observer bias, or geographic scale.

Data can be difficult to interpret.

(Brown et al, 2013)