Accuracy of ARGOS Locations of Pinnipeds at-Sea Estimated Using Fastloc GPS

Background: ARGOS satellite telemetry is one of the most widely used methods to track the movements of free-ranging marine and terrestrial animals and is fundamental to studies of foraging ecology, migratory behavior and habitat-use. ARGOS location estimates do not include complete error estimations...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Daniel P. Costa, Patrick W. Robinson, Daniel E. Crocker, John P. Y. Arnould, Autumn-Lynn Harrison, Samantha E. Simmons, Jason L. Hassrick, Andrew J. Hoskins, Stephen P. Kirkman, Herman Oosthuizen, Stella Villegas-Amtmann
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: PLoS ONE 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/122872
id ftcalifstateuniv:oai:scholarworks:kp78gh02v
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcalifstateuniv:oai:scholarworks:kp78gh02v 2024-09-30T14:34:24+00:00 Accuracy of ARGOS Locations of Pinnipeds at-Sea Estimated Using Fastloc GPS Daniel P. Costa Patrick W. Robinson Daniel E. Crocker John P. Y. Arnould Autumn-Lynn Harrison Samantha E. Simmons Jason L. Hassrick Andrew J. Hoskins Stephen P. Kirkman Herman Oosthuizen Stella Villegas-Amtmann 2010-01 http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/122872 English eng PLoS ONE This research was conducted as part of the Tagging of Pacific Predators (TOPP) program, and was supported in part by the Dr. Earl H. Myers and Ethel M. Myers Oceanographic, Marine Biology Trust, the Friends of Long Marine Lab, the Charles Darwin station, UCMEXUS, Center For Remote Sensing (UCSC), the National Ocean Partnership Program (N00014-02-1-1012), the Office of Naval Research (N00014-00-1-0880, N00014-03-1-0651 and N00014-08-1-1195), National Science Foundation OPP grants ANT-0523332 and ANT-0440687-02, International Association of Oil and Gas Producers contract JIP2207-23, the Moore, Packard, and Sloan Foundations and the Australian Research Council. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/122872 pinnipeds Fastloc GPS satellite telemetry animal behavior ARGOS Article 2010 ftcalifstateuniv 2024-09-10T17:06:15Z Background: ARGOS satellite telemetry is one of the most widely used methods to track the movements of free-ranging marine and terrestrial animals and is fundamental to studies of foraging ecology, migratory behavior and habitat-use. ARGOS location estimates do not include complete error estimations, and for many marine organisms, the most commonly acquired locations (Location Class 0, A, B, or Z) are provided with no declared error estimate. Methodology/Principal Findings: We compared the accuracy of ARGOS locations to those obtained using Fastloc GPS from the same electronic tags on five species of pinnipeds: 9 California sea lions (Zalophus californianus), 4 Galapagos sea lions (Zalophus wollebaeki), 6 Cape fur seals (Arctocephalus pusillus pusillus), 3 Australian fur seals (A. p. doriferus) and 5 northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris). These species encompass a range of marine habitats (highly pelagic vs coastal), diving behaviors (mean dive durations 2–21 min) and range of latitudes (equator to temperate). A total of 7,318 ARGOS positions and 27,046 GPS positions were collected. Of these, 1,105 ARGOS positions were obtained within five minutes of a GPS position and were used for comparison. The 68th percentile ARGOS location errors as measured in this study were LC-3 0.49 km, LC-2 1.01 km, LC-1 1.20 km, LC-0 4.18 km, LC-A 6.19 km, LC-B 10.28 km. Conclusions/Significance: The ARGOS errors measured here are greater than those provided by ARGOS, but within the range of other studies. The error was non-normally distributed with each LC highly right-skewed. Locations of species that make short duration dives and spend extended periods on the surface (sea lions and fur seals) had less error than species like elephant seals that spend more time underwater and have shorter surface intervals. Supplemental data (S1) are provided allowing the creation of density distributions that can be used in a variety of filtering algorithms to improve the quality of ARGOS tracking data. Published by PLoS ONE and ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Elephant Seals Scholarworks from California State University Galapagos
institution Open Polar
collection Scholarworks from California State University
op_collection_id ftcalifstateuniv
language English
topic pinnipeds
Fastloc GPS
satellite telemetry
animal behavior
ARGOS
spellingShingle pinnipeds
Fastloc GPS
satellite telemetry
animal behavior
ARGOS
Daniel P. Costa
Patrick W. Robinson
Daniel E. Crocker
John P. Y. Arnould
Autumn-Lynn Harrison
Samantha E. Simmons
Jason L. Hassrick
Andrew J. Hoskins
Stephen P. Kirkman
Herman Oosthuizen
Stella Villegas-Amtmann
Accuracy of ARGOS Locations of Pinnipeds at-Sea Estimated Using Fastloc GPS
topic_facet pinnipeds
Fastloc GPS
satellite telemetry
animal behavior
ARGOS
description Background: ARGOS satellite telemetry is one of the most widely used methods to track the movements of free-ranging marine and terrestrial animals and is fundamental to studies of foraging ecology, migratory behavior and habitat-use. ARGOS location estimates do not include complete error estimations, and for many marine organisms, the most commonly acquired locations (Location Class 0, A, B, or Z) are provided with no declared error estimate. Methodology/Principal Findings: We compared the accuracy of ARGOS locations to those obtained using Fastloc GPS from the same electronic tags on five species of pinnipeds: 9 California sea lions (Zalophus californianus), 4 Galapagos sea lions (Zalophus wollebaeki), 6 Cape fur seals (Arctocephalus pusillus pusillus), 3 Australian fur seals (A. p. doriferus) and 5 northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris). These species encompass a range of marine habitats (highly pelagic vs coastal), diving behaviors (mean dive durations 2–21 min) and range of latitudes (equator to temperate). A total of 7,318 ARGOS positions and 27,046 GPS positions were collected. Of these, 1,105 ARGOS positions were obtained within five minutes of a GPS position and were used for comparison. The 68th percentile ARGOS location errors as measured in this study were LC-3 0.49 km, LC-2 1.01 km, LC-1 1.20 km, LC-0 4.18 km, LC-A 6.19 km, LC-B 10.28 km. Conclusions/Significance: The ARGOS errors measured here are greater than those provided by ARGOS, but within the range of other studies. The error was non-normally distributed with each LC highly right-skewed. Locations of species that make short duration dives and spend extended periods on the surface (sea lions and fur seals) had less error than species like elephant seals that spend more time underwater and have shorter surface intervals. Supplemental data (S1) are provided allowing the creation of density distributions that can be used in a variety of filtering algorithms to improve the quality of ARGOS tracking data. Published by PLoS ONE and ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Daniel P. Costa
Patrick W. Robinson
Daniel E. Crocker
John P. Y. Arnould
Autumn-Lynn Harrison
Samantha E. Simmons
Jason L. Hassrick
Andrew J. Hoskins
Stephen P. Kirkman
Herman Oosthuizen
Stella Villegas-Amtmann
author_facet Daniel P. Costa
Patrick W. Robinson
Daniel E. Crocker
John P. Y. Arnould
Autumn-Lynn Harrison
Samantha E. Simmons
Jason L. Hassrick
Andrew J. Hoskins
Stephen P. Kirkman
Herman Oosthuizen
Stella Villegas-Amtmann
author_sort Daniel P. Costa
title Accuracy of ARGOS Locations of Pinnipeds at-Sea Estimated Using Fastloc GPS
title_short Accuracy of ARGOS Locations of Pinnipeds at-Sea Estimated Using Fastloc GPS
title_full Accuracy of ARGOS Locations of Pinnipeds at-Sea Estimated Using Fastloc GPS
title_fullStr Accuracy of ARGOS Locations of Pinnipeds at-Sea Estimated Using Fastloc GPS
title_full_unstemmed Accuracy of ARGOS Locations of Pinnipeds at-Sea Estimated Using Fastloc GPS
title_sort accuracy of argos locations of pinnipeds at-sea estimated using fastloc gps
publisher PLoS ONE
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/122872
geographic Galapagos
geographic_facet Galapagos
genre Elephant Seals
genre_facet Elephant Seals
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/122872
_version_ 1811638032747462656