A fresh look at an old concept: home-range estimation in a tidy world
Published 2021 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
A fresh look at an old concept: home-range estimation in a tidy world
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
PeerJ
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages e11031
Publisher
PeerJ
Online
2021-03-19
DOI
10.7717/peerj.11031
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Effects of body size on estimation of mammalian area requirements
- (2020) Michael J. Noonan et al. CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
- Towards the comparison of home range estimators obtained from contrasting tracking regimes: the wild boar as a case study
- (2020) Albert Peris et al. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE RESEARCH
- Computational Reproducibility in The Wildlife Society's Flagship Journals
- (2020) Althea A. Archmiller et al. JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
- Preference and familiarity mediate spatial responses of a large herbivore to experimental manipulation of resource availability
- (2020) Nathan Ranc et al. Scientific Reports
- Animal movement tools (amt ): R package for managing tracking data and conducting habitat selection analyses
- (2019) Johannes Signer et al. Ecology and Evolution
- Declining home range area predicts reduced late-life survival in two wild ungulate populations
- (2018) Hannah Froy et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- Moving in the Anthropocene: Global reductions in terrestrial mammalian movements
- (2018) Marlee A. Tucker et al. SCIENCE
- Wildlife biology, big data, and reproducible research
- (2018) Keith P. Lewis et al. WILDLIFE SOCIETY BULLETIN
- Delineating the ecological and geographic edge of an opportunist: The American black bear exploiting an agricultural landscape
- (2018) Mark A. Ditmer et al. ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
- A comprehensive analysis of autocorrelation and bias in home range estimation
- (2018) Michael J. Noonan et al. ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS
- Estimating where and how animals travel: An optimal framework for path reconstruction from autocorrelated tracking data
- (2015) Chris H. Fleming et al. ECOLOGY
- Rigorous home range estimation with movement data: a new autocorrelated kernel density estimator
- (2015) C. H. Fleming et al. ECOLOGY
- Terrestrial animal tracking as an eye on life and planet
- (2015) R. Kays et al. SCIENCE
- Is there a single best estimator? Selection of home range estimators using area-under-the-curve
- (2015) W David Walter et al. Movement Ecology
- Tidy Data
- (2015) Hadley Wickham Journal of Statistical Software
- From Fine-Scale Foraging to Home Ranges: A Semivariance Approach to Identifying Movement Modes across Spatiotemporal Scales
- (2014) Chris H. Fleming et al. AMERICAN NATURALIST
- Variation in home-range size of Black-backed Woodpeckers
- (2014) Morgan W. Tingley et al. CONDOR
- The need for standardization in wildlife science: home range estimators as an example
- (2013) Roman Gula et al. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE RESEARCH
- Animal behavior, cost-based corridor models, and real corridors
- (2013) Scott LaPoint et al. LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
- Diverse perspectives on mammal home ranges or a home range is more than location densities
- (2012) Roger A. Powell JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY
- Could you please phrase “home range” as a question?
- (2012) John Fieberg et al. JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY
- The Movebank data model for animal tracking
- (2011) B. Kranstauber et al. ENVIRONMENTAL MODELLING & SOFTWARE
- What determines variation in home range size across spatiotemporal scales in a large browsing herbivore?
- (2011) Floris M. van Beest et al. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
- Estimating utilization distributions with kernel versus local convex hull methods
- (2011) Nathanael I. Lichti et al. JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
- The home-range concept: are traditional estimators still relevant with modern telemetry technology?
- (2010) J. G. Kie et al. PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started