4.6 Article

Animal tracking moves community ecology: Opportunities and challenges

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
Volume 91, Issue 7, Pages 1334-1344

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13698

Keywords

dispersal; ecological interactions; environmental niche; GPS-tracking; intraspecific variation; remote sensing

Funding

  1. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo [2020/11953-2]
  2. Instituto Serrapilheira [Serra-R-2011-37572]
  3. National Aeronautics and Space Administratio [80NSSC18K]
  4. Yale University, Max Planck-Yale Center for Biodiversity Movement and Global Change

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Individual decisions play a crucial role in shaping patterns and processes in communities. However, the integration of individual variation into community ecology has been hindered by challenges in data collection. Technological and statistical advances in GPS-tracking, remote sensing, and behavioral ecology provide tools for integrating intraspecific variation into community processes. By linking movement data with environmental data, ecologists can quantify both intraspecific and interspecific variation, which underpin community assemblage and dynamics.
Individual decisions regarding how, why and when organisms interact with one another and with their environment scale up to shape patterns and processes in communities. Recent evidence has firmly established the prevalence of intraspecific variation in nature and its relevance in community ecology, yet challenges associated with collecting data on large numbers of individual conspecifics and heterospecifics have hampered integration of individual variation into community ecology. Nevertheless, recent technological and statistical advances in GPS-tracking, remote sensing and behavioural ecology offer a toolbox for integrating intraspecific variation into community processes. More than simply describing where organisms go, movement data provide unique information about interactions and environmental associations from which a true individual-to-community framework can be built. By linking the movement paths of both conspecifics and heterospecifics with environmental data, ecologists can now simultaneously quantify intraspecific and interspecific variation regarding the Eltonian (biotic interactions) and Grinnellian (environmental conditions) factors underpinning community assemblage and dynamics, yet substantial logistical and analytical challenges must be addressed for these approaches to realize their full potential. Across communities, empirical integration of Eltonian and Grinnellian factors can support conservation applications and reveal metacommunity dynamics via tracking-based dispersal data. As the logistical and analytical challenges associated with multi-species tracking are surmounted, we envision a future where individual movements and their ecological and environmental signatures will bring resolution to many enduring issues in community ecology.

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