December 1, 2015
Journal Article

Monitoring Wildlife Interactions with Their Environment: An Interdisciplinary Approach

Abstract

In a rapidly changing world, wildlife ecologists strive to correctly model and predict complex relationships between animals and their environment, which facilitates management decisions impacting public policy to conserve and protect delicate ecosystems. Recent advances in monitoring systems span scientific domains, including animal and weather monitoring devices and landscape classification mapping techniques. The current challenge is how to combine and use detailed output from various sources to address questions spanning multiple disciplines. WolfScout wildlife and weather tracking system is a software tool capable of filling this niche. WolfScout automates integration of the latest technological advances in wildlife GPS collars, weather stations, drought conditions, and severe weather reports, and animal demographic information. The WolfScout database stores a variety of classified landscape maps including natural and manmade features. Additionally, WolfScout’s spatial database management system allows users to calculate distances between animals’ location and landscape characteristics, which are linked to the best approximation of environmental conditions at the animal’s location during the interaction. Through a secure website, data are exported in formats compatible with multiple software programs including R and ArcGIS. The WolfScout design promotes interoperability in data, between researchers, and software applications while standardizing analyses of animal interactions with their environment.

Revised: December 20, 2016 | Published: December 1, 2015

Citation

Charles-Smith L.E., I.X. Domnguez, R.J. Fornaro, C.S. DePerno, and S. Kennedy-Stoskopf. 2015. Monitoring Wildlife Interactions with Their Environment: An Interdisciplinary Approach. Journal of Ecology and Environmental Sciences 3, no. 4:31-37. PNNL-SA-108672.