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Efficacy of Remote Telemetry Data Loggers for Landscape-Scale Monitoring: A Case Study of American Martens

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Alexej P. K. Siren, Daniel S. Maynard, Jillian R. Kilborn, and Peter J. Pekins, 2016-09-03, Efficacy of Remote Telemetry Data Loggers for Landscape-Scale Monitoring: A Case Study of American Martens: Tools and Technology, v. 40, iss. 3, p. 57-=582.

Summary

Remote telemetry data loggers are commonly used for monitoring wildlife species. Although remote telemetry data loggers provide reliable microhabitat use data, few studies have used them to evaluate landscape-scale, temporal, and spatial habitat use. We installed 3 data loggers along a mountain ridgeline that was being developed for a commercial wind farm in northern New Hampshire, USA, to monitor use of a high-elevation forest by American martens (Martes americana). We tested 1) the efficacy of data loggers to record presence–absence and index space use in a 6.75-km2 area, validating marten locations using radiotelemetry and camera traps; and 2) whether there were diel and seasonal biases of data logger detections. As a case study, [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northeast CASC

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Wildlife and Plants
Drought, Fire and Extreme Weather
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journalTools and Technology
parts
typeDOI
value10.1002/wsb.680
typeVolume
value40
typeIssue
value3
typePages
value57-=582

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