Works (249)

Updated: April 22nd, 2024 07:45

2024 article

Combining camera trap surveys and IUCN range maps to improve knowledge of species distributions

Chen, C., Granados, A., Brodie, J. F., Kays, R., Davies, T. J., Liu, R., … Burton, A. C. (2024, March 3). CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Vol. 3.

author keywords: camera trap; IUCN; mammal distribution; mammal occurrence; range map; species distributions
TL;DR: It is suggested that combining range maps with accumulating data from ground-based biodiversity sensors, such as camera traps, provides a richer knowledge base for conservation mapping and planning, and overrepresent ranges by including areas where a species may be absent, particularly at range edges. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: January 29, 2024

2024 article

Mammal responses to global changes in human activity vary by trophic group and landscape

Burton, A. C., Beirne, C., Gayno, K. M., Sun, C., Granados, A., Allen, M. L., … Kays, R. (2024, March 18). NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, Vol. 3.

By: A. Burton*, C. Beirne*, K. Gayno*, C. Sun*, A. Granados*, M. Allen*, J. Alston*, G. Alvarenga* ...

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science, NC State University Libraries
Added: April 15, 2024

2024 article

Non-invasive methods for monitoring weasels: emerging technologies and priorities for future research

Jachowski, D. S., Bergeson, S. M., Cotey, S. R., Croose, E., Hofmeester, T. R., Macpherson, J., … Zub, K. (2024, January 19). MAMMAL REVIEW, Vol. 1.

By: D. Jachowski*, S. Bergeson*, S. Cotey*, E. Croose*, T. Hofmeester*, J. Macpherson*, P. Wright*, C. Calderon-Acevedo* ...

author keywords: camera trap; Mustela; Neogale; non-invasive monitoring
TL;DR: A literature review and the first ever International Weasel Monitoring Symposium were conducted to synthesise information on historical and current non‐invasive monitoring techniques for weasels, finding that the most promising non‐invasive monitoring techniques available include use of citizen scientist reporting, detection dogs, detecting tracks, non‐invasive genetic surveys, and enclosed or unenclosed camera trap systems. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: February 12, 2024

2024 journal article

Shifting mammal communities and declining species richness along an elevational gradient on Mount Kenya

Ecology and Evolution.

Source: ORCID
Added: April 15, 2024

2023 journal article

A multi-species evaluation of digital wildlife monitoring using the Sigfox IoT network

ANIMAL BIOTELEMETRY, 11(1).

By: T. Wild*, L. Schalkwyk*, P. Viljoen*, G. Heine*, N. Richter*, B. Vorneweg*, J. Koblitz*, D. Dechmann* ...

author keywords: Animal tracking; Movement ecology; Telemetry; Biologging; LPWAN; LoRa; Wireless sensors; Embedded systems; Onboard processing; Sigfox
TL;DR: The Sigfox IoT network is evaluated for the potential as a real-time multi-sensor data retrieval and tag commanding system for studying fauna across a diversity of species and ecosystems and for the performance of Sigfox Atlas Native, a low-power method for positional estimates based on radio signal strengths. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: April 17, 2023

2023 article

A vision for incorporating human mobility in the study of human-wildlife interactions

Ellis-Soto, D., Oliver, R. Y., Brum-Bastos, V., Demsar, U., Jesmer, B., Long, J. A., … Jetz, W. (2023, August 7). NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, Vol. 8.

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 28, 2023

2023 journal article

An automated approach for counting groups of flying animals applied to one of the world's largest bat colonies

ECOSPHERE, 14(6).

author keywords: bats; computer vision; convolutional neural network; flight dynamics; image analysis; migration; population estimate
TL;DR: A deep learning-based system using consumer cameras that not only counts but also records behavioral information for large numbers of flying animals in a range of lighting conditions including near darkness is developed. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: June 30, 2023

2023 journal article

Camera trapping expands the view into global biodiversity and its change

By: R. Oliver*, F. Iannarilli*, J. Ahumada*, E. Fegraus*, N. Flores*, R. Kays n, T. Birch*, A. Ranipeta* ...

author keywords: camera trap; biodiversity; data gaps; convention on biological diversity
MeSH headings : Animals; Biodiversity; Animals, Wild; Mammals; Birds; Knowledge
TL;DR: Comparing CT records of terrestrial mammals and birds from the recently released Wildlife Insights platform to publicly available occurrences from many observation types in the Global Biodiversity Information Facility shows that the continued collection and mobilization of CT data has the potential to offer a critical lens into biodiversity. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: June 19, 2023

2023 article

Camtrap DP: an open standard for the FAIR exchange and archiving of camera trap data

Bubnicki, J., Norton, B., Baskauf, S., Bruce, T., Cagnacci, F., Casaer, J., … Desmet, P. (2023, December 9). REMOTE SENSING IN ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION, Vol. 12.

author keywords: Biodiversity data; camera traps; data exchange; data sharing; information standards
TL;DR: A new data exchange format, the Camera Trap Data Package (Camtrap DP), designed to allow users to easily exchange, harmonize and archive camera trap data at local to global scales, and achieves interoperability by building upon existing standards, Frictionless Data Package in particular. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: January 2, 2024

2023 article

Ecological effects of a declining red wolf population

Murray, A., Sutherland, R., & Kays, R. (2023, November 20). ANIMAL CONSERVATION, Vol. 11.

By: A. Murray*, R. Sutherland* & R. Kays*

author keywords: red wolf; endangered species; North Carolina; relative abundance; camera traps; carnivore reintroductions
TL;DR: The results lend correlational support to the hypothesis that red wolves had a strong effect on their ecosystems by suppressing prey and competitor populations when they were at their peak, with the caveat that these impacts can decline rapidly if the predators dwindle back to critically low numbers. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: December 18, 2023

2023 article

From backyard to backcountry: changes in mammal communities across an urbanization gradient

Hansen, C. P., Kays, R., & Millspaugh, J. J. (2023, November 28). (J. Goheen, Ed.). JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, Vol. 11.

By: C. Hansen*, R. Kays n & J. Millspaugh*

Ed(s): J. Goheen

author keywords: activity time; diel activity; housing density; mammal; occupancy; relative abundance; species richness; urbanization
TL;DR: This study confirms that some mammals can live and thrive in developed areas, it emphasizes the importance of maintaining wild areas for those species that cannot, and was the strongest driver of mammal distribution. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities (OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: December 18, 2023

2023 journal article

Maximum temperatures determine the habitat affiliations of North American mammals

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 120(50).

By: M. Tourani*, R. Sollmann*, R. Kays n, J. Ahumada*, E. Fegraus* & D. Karp*

author keywords: biodiversity conservation; habitat loss; occupancy; climate change; mammal community
TL;DR: Choices about enhancing the conservation value of anthropogenic landscapes versus protecting natural areas should consider how species’ habitat affiliations are likely to shift under a changing climate, as climatic conditions dictate species’ capacities to persist in anthropogenic landscapes. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: January 29, 2024

2023 journal article

Multi-scale movement syndromes for comparative analyses of animal movement patterns

MOVEMENT ECOLOGY, 11(1).

TL;DR: A new multi-scale movement syndrome framework is introduced for describing and comparing animal movements and used to explore the behavior of four sympatric mammals, finding differences in feeding ecology were a better predictor of movement patterns than a species’ locomotory or sensory adaptations. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: October 16, 2023

2023 journal article

Olingos do eat insects: Records of nocturnal mammals preying on arthropods in arboreal live-capture traps

FOOD WEBS, 36.

By: D. Balbuena*, G. Inga*, L. Ponce*, R. Zuniga* & R. Kays n

author keywords: Bassaricyon; Canopy; Arboreal traps; Caluromys; Marmosa; Insect predation
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 7, 2023

2023 review

The Internet of Animals: what it is, what it could be

[Review of ]. TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 38(9), 859–869.

By: R. Kays n & M. Wikelski*

TL;DR: By linking data sets, integrating live data, and automating workflows, the IoA has the potential to enable discoveries and predictions relevant to human societies and the conservation of animals. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: May 31, 2023

2023 journal article

Using decoys and camera traps to estimate depredation rates and neonate survival

PLOS ONE, 18(10).

By: H. Boone n, K. Pacifici n, C. Moorman n & R. Kays n

TL;DR: It is concluded that the camera-decoy approach is a cost-effective method to estimate a neonate survival probability index based on depredation probability and identify which predators are most important. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
3. Good Health and Well-being (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: December 18, 2023

2022 journal article

A Quantitative Framework for Identifying Patterns of Route-Use in Animal Movement Data

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 9.

author keywords: travel routes; spatial cognition; animal movement; navigation; corridors; unsupervised clustering; routine movement; animal cognition
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: February 7, 2022

2022 article

A Two-Species Occupancy Model with a Continuous-Time Detection Process Reveals Spatial and Temporal Interactions

Kellner, K. F., Parsons, A. W., Kays, R., Millspaugh, J. J., & Rota, C. T. (2022, January 7). JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL BIOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STATISTICS, Vol. 1.

author keywords: Activity patterns; Camera traps; Occupancy; Point process; Temporal interactions
TL;DR: The proposed two-species occupancy model broadens the set of questions ecologists can ask regarding both spatial and temporal interactions between species, as well as fine-scale temporal covariates (e.g., weather). (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2022 article

Biological Earth observation with animal sensors

Jetz, W., Tertitski, G., Kays, R., Mueller, U., & Wikelski, M. (2022, April). TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, Vol. 37, pp. 293–298.

By: W. Jetz*, G. Tertitski*, R. Kays n, U. Mueller* & M. Wikelski*

MeSH headings : Animals; Conservation of Natural Resources; Earth, Planet; Ecosystem; Movement
TL;DR: Space-based tracking technology using low-cost miniature tags is now delivering data on fine-scale animal movement at near-global scale that offers a biological lens on habitat integrity and connectivity for conservation and human health; a global network of animal sentinels of environmental change. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: March 28, 2022

2022 journal article

Documenting Wild Turkey Breeding Patterns in North Carolina with Camera Traps

SOUTHEASTERN NATURALIST, 21(3), 220–234.

By: C. Carey n, A. Lohr* & R. Kays n

TL;DR: Analyzing the timing of turkey reproduction across North Carolina by examining camera-trap images collected from 527 sites over 3 years found a peak of male strutting behavior at Julian week 13 and the peak of egg hatching at week 22, but not across the 3 ecoregions of the state. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: October 31, 2022

2022 journal article

Exploring spatial nonstationarity for four mammal species reveals regional variation in environmental relationships

ECOSPHERE, 13(8).

By: B. Pease*, K. Pacifici n & R. Kays n

author keywords: spatial nonstationarity; species distributions; species-environment relationships
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: August 4, 2022

2022 article

Global camera trap synthesis highlights the importance of protected areas in maintaining mammal diversity

Chen, C., Brodie, J. F., Kays, R., Davies, T. J., Liu, R., Fisher, J. T., … Burton, A. C. (2022, January 26). CONSERVATION LETTERS, Vol. 1.

By: C. Chen*, J. Brodie*, R. Kays n, T. Davies*, R. Liu*, J. Fisher*, J. Ahumada*, W. McShea* ...

author keywords: camera trap; functional diversity; human accessibility; human footprint; mammal diversity; protected area; species richness; taxonomic diversity
TL;DR: There is a strong positive correlation between mammal taxonomic diversity and the proportion of a surveyed area covered by PAs at a global scale and a need to better understand the functional response of mammal communities to protection. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: January 27, 2022

2022 article

Globally, tree fecundity exceeds productivity gradients

Journe, V., Andrus, R., Aravena, M.-C., Ascoli, D., Berretti, R., Berveiller, D., … Clark, J. S. (2022, April 23). ECOLOGY LETTERS, Vol. 4.

By: V. Journe*, R. Andrus*, M. Aravena*, D. Ascoli*, R. Berretti*, D. Berveiller*, M. Bogdziewicz*, T. Boivin* ...

author keywords: climate; competition; forest regeneration; seed consumption; species interactions; tree fecundity
MeSH headings : Biodiversity; Climate; Fertility; Forests; Seeds; Trees
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: May 2, 2022

2022 article

How is Ecology Helping Us Understand COVID-19?

Kays, R. (2022, June 22).

By: R. Kays n

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
3. Good Health and Well-being (OpenAlex)
Source: ORCID
Added: August 17, 2022

2022 article

Integrating data types to estimate spatial patterns of avian migration across the Western Hemisphere

Meehan, T. D., Saunders, S. P., DeLuca, W. V., Michel, N. L., Grand, J., Deppe, J. L., … Wilsey, C. B. (2022, July 6). ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, Vol. 7.

By: T. Meehan*, S. Saunders*, W. DeLuca*, N. Michel*, J. Grand*, J. Deppe*, M. Jimenez*, E. Knight* ...

author keywords: annual cycle; band re-encounter; data integration; eBird; least-cost path; migratory connectivity; tracking
MeSH headings : Animal Migration; Animals; Birds; Seasons; South America
TL;DR: This methodology of combining individual‐based seasonal movement data with temporally dynamic species distribution models provides a comprehensive approach to integrating multiple data types to describe broad‐scale spatial patterns of animal movement. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
14. Life Below Water (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: July 18, 2022

2022 journal article

Intensive hunting changes human-wildlife relationships

PEERJ, 10.

By: A. Parsons n, M. Wikelski*, B. Wolff*, J. Dodel & R. Kays n

author keywords: Antipredator behavior; Ecological impacts; Europe; Hunting pressure; Landscape of fear; North America; Relative abundance; Risk allocation
MeSH headings : Animals; Humans; Animals, Wild; Hunting; Deer; Ecosystem; Forests
TL;DR: The results suggest that the duration and intensity of managed hunting can have strong and predictable effects on animal abundance and behavior, with the potential for corresponding changes in the ecological impacts of wildlife. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: May 1, 2023

2022 journal article

Life in 2.5D: Animal Movement in the Trees

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 10.

By: R. Harel*, S. Alavi*, A. Ashbury*, J. Aurisano*, T. Berger-Wolf*, G. Davis*, B. Hirsch*, U. Kalbitzer* ...

author keywords: arboreal mammals; foraging; decision-making; navigation; forest
TL;DR: This synthesis will shed light on fundamental aspects of arboreal animals’ cognition and ecology, including how they navigate landscapes of risk and reward and weigh energetic trade-offs, as well as how their environment shapes their spatial cognition and their social dynamics. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: June 27, 2022

2022 article

Mitigating pseudoreplication and bias in resource selection functions with autocorrelation-informed weighting

Alston, J. M., Fleming, C. H., Kays, R., Streicher, J. P., Downs, C. T., Ramesh, T., … Calabrese, J. M. (2022, November 20). METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, Vol. 11.

author keywords: continuous-time movement models; habitat selection; home range; Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process; space use; spatial point process; stochastic process model; utilization distribution
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: November 21, 2022

2022 article

Mitigating pseudoreplication and bias in resource selection functions with autocorrelation-informed weighting

Alston, J. M., Fleming, C. H., Kays, R., Streicher, J. P., Downs, C. T., Ramesh, T., & Calabrese, J. M. (2022, April 22).

TL;DR: This study introduces a method for likelihood weighting of animal locations to mitigate the negative consequences of autocorrelation on resource selection functions, and demonstrates that this method weights each observed location in an animal’s movement track according to its level of non-independence, expanding confidence intervals and reducing bias that can arise when there are missing data in the movement track. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: ORCID
Added: May 20, 2022

2022 article

Monitoring small mammal abundance using NEON data: are calibrated indices useful?

Parsons, A. W., Clark, J. S., & Kays, R. (2022, November 25). JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, Vol. 11.

By: A. Parsons n, J. Clark* & R. Kays n

author keywords: abundance; abundance indices; Bayesian; capture; recapture; NEON; small mammal
TL;DR: It is found that neither raw abundance indices nor index calibrations were reliable approximations of absolute abundance, with raw indices less correlated with absolute abundance than index calibratedations, and none of the indices should be used for comparing different species due to high variation in capture probabilities. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: October 12, 2022

2022 article

MoveApps - a serverless no-code analysis platform for animal tracking data

Kölzsch, A., Davidson, S. C., Gauggel, D., Hahn, C., Hirt, J., Kays, R., … Safi, K. (2022, February 19). (Vol. 2). Vol. 2.

By: A. Kölzsch*, S. Davidson*, D. Gauggel, C. Hahn, J. Hirt, R. Kays n, I. Lang*, A. Lohr* ...

Source: ORCID
Added: February 20, 2022

2022 journal article

MoveApps: a serverless no-code analysis platform for animal tracking data

MOVEMENT ECOLOGY, 10(1).

By: A. Koelzsch, S. Davidson*, D. Gauggel, C. Hahn, J. Hirt, R. Kays*, I. Lang*, A. Lohr* ...

author keywords: Animal movement; Movement ecology; Bio-logging; Method sharing; Community empowerment; Analysis code publication; Reproducibility; Cloud infrastructure; Serverless computing
TL;DR: The MoveApps platform is meant to empower the community to supply, exchange and use analysis code in an intuitive environment that allows fast and traceable results and feedback and is intended to increase the pace of knowledge generation and integration to match the huge growth rate in bio-logging data acquisition. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: July 26, 2022

2022 journal article

Perspectives in machine learning for wildlife conservation

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 13(1).

MeSH headings : Animals; Animals, Wild; Automation; Conservation of Natural Resources; Ecology; Ecosystem; Knowledge; Machine Learning; Models, Theoretical
TL;DR: It is argued that animal ecologists can capitalize on large datasets generated by modern sensors by combining machine learning approaches with domain knowledge by incorporating machine learning into ecological workflows. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: March 7, 2022

2022 article

Population-level inference for home-range areas

Fleming, C. H., Deznabi, I., Alavi, S., Crofoot, M. C., Hirsch, B. T., Medici, E. P., … Calabrese, J. M. (2022, March 11). METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, Vol. 2.

By: C. Fleming*, I. Deznabi*, S. Alavi*, M. Crofoot*, B. Hirsch*, E. Medici*, M. Noonan*, R. Kays n ...

author keywords: animal movement; autocorrelation; home range; population ecology
TL;DR: The approach allows researchers to more accurately compare different populations with different movement behaviours or sampling schedules while retaining statistical precision and power when individual home‐range uncertainties vary, and emphasizes the estimation of effect sizes when comparing populations. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: February 4, 2022

2022 article

SNAPSHOT USA 2020: A second coordinated national camera trap survey of the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic

Kays, R., Cove, M. V., Diaz, J., Todd, K., Bresnan, C., Snider, M., … McShea, W. J. (2022, July 24). ECOLOGY, Vol. 6.

By: R. Kays n, M. Cove*, J. Diaz*, K. Todd*, C. Bresnan*, M. Snider n, T. Lee*, J. Jasper* ...

author keywords: biodiversity; biogeography; camera traps; Carnivora; Cetartiodactyla; Didelphimorphia; Lagomorpha; mammals; occupancy modeling; species distribution modeling
MeSH headings : Animals; Animals, Wild; Birds; COVID-19 / epidemiology; Humans; Mammals; Pandemics; United States
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: June 6, 2022

2022 article

Saving Wildlife on a Changing Planet

Kays, R. (2022, January 15). (Vol. 1). Vol. 1.

By: R. Kays*

Source: ORCID
Added: February 2, 2022

2022 journal article

The effect of urbanization on spatiotemporal interactions between gray foxes and coyotes

ECOSPHERE, 13(3).

author keywords: camera traps; carnivore; occupancy; spatiotemporal; species interactions
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: March 31, 2022

2022 article

What drives spatially varying ecological relationships in a wide-ranging species?

Pease, B. S., Pacifici, K., Kays, R., & Reich, B. (2022, July 4). DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, Vol. 7.

By: B. Pease*, K. Pacifici n, R. Kays n & B. Reich n

author keywords: American black bear; niche conservatism; spatial non-stationarity; species-environment relationships; Ursus americanus
TL;DR: This work has suggested that niche traits that are conserved should reflect the evolutionary history of a species whereas more flexible ecological traits could vary at finer scales, reflecting local adaptation. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: July 5, 2022

2022 article

Which mammals can be identified from camera traps and crowdsourced photographs?

Kays, R., Lasky, M., Allen, M. L., Dowler, R. C., Hawkins, M. T. R., Hope, A. G., … Cove, M. V. (2022, April 7). (R. Moratelli, Ed.). JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, Vol. 4.

By: R. Kays n, M. Lasky*, M. Allen*, R. Dowler*, M. Hawkins*, A. Hope*, B. Kohli*, V. Mathis* ...

Ed(s): R. Moratelli

author keywords: artificial intelligence; biodiversity; camera trap; citizen science; curation; identification; iNaturalist; photograph; range map; voucher
TL;DR: The extent to which 335 terrestrial nonvolant North American mammals can be identified in typical photographs, with and without considering species range maps is quantified. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: April 14, 2022

2022 article

Wildlife Insights: How Camera Trap Data Can Foster Global Biodiversity Conservation

Iannarilli, F., Oliver, R., Birch, T., Beery, S., Fegraus, E., Flores, N., … Jetz, W. (2022, January 31). (Vol. 1). Vol. 1.

By: F. Iannarilli*, R. Oliver*, T. Birch*, S. Beery*, E. Fegraus*, N. Flores*, R. Kays n, J. Ahumada*, W. Jetz*

Source: ORCID
Added: February 2, 2022

2021 article

A pilot study on the home range and movement patterns of the Andean Fox Lycalopex culpaeus (Molina, 1782) in Cotopaxi National Park, Ecuador

Castellanos, A., Castellanos, F. X., Kays, R., & Brito, J. (2021, August 17). MAMMALIA, Vol. 8.

author keywords: Andean fox habits; continuous-time movement model; mammal tracking; non-parametric methods; straight-line displacement
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2021 article

Arboreal monkeys facilitate foraging of terrestrial frugivores

Havmoller, L. W., Loftus, J. C., Havmoller, R. W., Alavi, S. E., Caillaud, D., Grote, M. N., … Crofoot, M. C. (2021, September 19). BIOTROPICA, Vol. 9.

author keywords: attraction; camera trapping; eavesdropping; GPS tracking; interspecific associations; Panama; tropical forest
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that terrestrial frugivores are attracted to arboreal primates, likely because they increase local resource availability and suggest that their loss may have unanticipated consequences for thefrugivore community. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: October 4, 2021

2021 journal article

Can mammals thrive near urban areas in the Neotropics? Characterizing the community of a reclaimed tropical forest

TROPICAL ECOLOGY, 62(2), 174–185.

By: S. Schuttler*, S. Ramcharan*, H. Boone n, S. Stone n, . Brian J. O'Shea*, K. Gajapersad*, R. Kays n

author keywords: Camera traps; Neotropical forest; Occupancy modelling; Secondary forest; Suriname; Urbanization
TL;DR: Despite fewer species being detected than in large protected areas, the presence of some species in Peperpot Nature Park shows promise for small urban tropical forests to support robust mammal communities, provided they maintain some connectivity to larger source habitats. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: February 15, 2021

2021 journal article

Candid Critters: Challenges and Solutions in a Large-Scale Citizen Science Camera Trap Project

Citizen Science: Theory and Practice, 6(1).

TL;DR: An overview of the efforts to conduct a large-scale citizen science project using camera traps—North Carolina’s Candid Critters and eight key suggestions for overcoming challenges in study design, volunteer recruitment and management, equipment distribution, outreach, training, and data management. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: ORCID, Crossref
Added: July 19, 2021

2021 article

Carolina critters: a collection of camera-trap data from wildlife surveys across North Carolina

Lasky, M., Parsons, A. W., Schuttler, S. G., Hess, G., Sutherland, R., Kalies, L., … Kays, R. (2021, June 1). ECOLOGY, Vol. 6.

By: M. Lasky n, A. Parsons n, S. Schuttler*, G. Hess n, R. Sutherland*, L. Kalies*, S. Clark*, C. Olfenbuttel* ...

author keywords: biodiversity; camera trap; citizen science; database; ecology; mammal; species distribution
MeSH headings : Animals; Animals, Wild; Biodiversity; Ecosystem; Mammals; North Carolina
TL;DR: This large data set of camera trap surveys from 6,043 locations across all 100 counties of North Carolina from 2009 to 2019 increases the geographical distribution data for 39 mammal and bird species by >500% over what is available for North Carolina in the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF). (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: June 10, 2021

2021 article

Disturbance type and species life history predict mammal responses to humans

Suraci, J. P., Gaynor, K. M., Allen, M. L., Alexander, P., Brashares, J. S., Cendejas-Zarelli, S., … Wilmers, C. C. (2021, May 20). GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Vol. 5.

By: J. Suraci*, K. Gaynor*, M. Allen*, P. Alexander, J. Brashares*, S. Cendejas-Zarelli*, K. Crooks*, L. Elbroch* ...

author keywords: anthropogenic disturbance; carnivore; conservation; environmental filter; human footprint index; human‐ wildlife coexistence; occupancy; traits; ungulate; wildlife
MeSH headings : Animals; Animals, Wild; Ecosystem; Human Activities; Humans; Life History Traits; Mammals; North America
TL;DR: This approach provides insights into the complex mechanisms through which human activities shape mammal communities globally, revealing the drivers of the loss of larger predators in human‐modified landscapes. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: June 10, 2021

2021 journal article

Empirical evaluation of the spatial scale and detection process of camera trap surveys

MOVEMENT ECOLOGY, 9(1).

By: R. Kays n, A. Hody n, D. Jachowski* & A. Parsons n

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: August 15, 2021

2021 article

Estimating encounter location distributions from animal tracking data

Noonan, M. J., Martinez-Garcia, R., Davis, G. H., Crofoot, M. C., Kays, R., Hirsch, B. T., … Calabrese, J. M. (2021, May 14). METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, Vol. 5.

author keywords: animal movement; Cebus capucinus; contact; home range; interactions; Tiliqua rugosa
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: June 10, 2021

2021 journal article

Home range variation in leopards living across the human density gradient

JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 102(4), 1138–1148.

By: M. Snider n, V. Athreya*, G. Balme*, L. Bidner*, M. Farhadinia*, J. Fattebert*, M. Gompper*, S. Gubbi* ...

author keywords: habitat use; human carnivore interaction; human density; large carnivore; leopard; movement ecology; Panthera pardus
TL;DR: Leopards in open habitats had a predicted negative correlation in home range size with human population density, but leopard in closed habitats used larger home ranges in areas with more people and males used larger areas than females. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: September 7, 2021

2021 journal article

Mobilizing Animal Movement Data: API use and the Movebank platform

Biodiversity Information Science and Standards.

By: S. Davidson, G. Bohrer, A. Kölzsch, C. Vinciguerra & R. Kays*

TL;DR: There are needs to coordinate API development across animal tracking and biodiversity databases, and to develop a shared system for unique organism identifiers to recognize data for the same individuals across platforms, retain provenance and attribution information, and ensure beneficial and biologically meaningful data use. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: ORCID
Added: September 14, 2021

2021 article

Population-level inference for home-range areas

Fleming, C. H., Deznabi, I., Alavi, S., Crofoot, M. C., Hirsch, B. T., Medici, E. P., … Calabrese, J. M. (2021, July 6). (Vol. 7). Vol. 7.

By: C. Fleming*, I. Deznabi*, S. Alavi*, M. Crofoot*, B. Hirsch*, E. Medici*, M. Noonan*, R. Kays n ...

TL;DR: This work introduces a statistically and computationally efficient framework for the population-level analysis of home-range areas, based on autocorrelated kernel density estimation (AKDE), that can account for variable temporalAutocorrelation and estimation uncertainty. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: ORCID
Added: July 19, 2021

2021 article

SNAPSHOT USA 2019: a coordinated national camera trap survey of the United States

Cove, M. V., Kays, R., Bontrager, H., Bresnan, C., Lasky, M., Frerichs, T., … McShea, A. J. (2021, June). ECOLOGY, Vol. 102.

By: M. Cove, R. Kays*, H. Bontrager, C. Bresnan, M. Lasky, T. Frerichs, R. Klann, T. Lee ...

author keywords: biodiversity; biogeography; camera traps; carnivora; Cetartiodactyla; Cingulata; Didelphimorphia; Lagomorpha; mammals; occupancy modeling; Rodentia; species distribution modeling
MeSH headings : Animals; Animals, Wild; Birds; Mammals; Population Dynamics; United States
TL;DR: The SNAPSHOT USA project, a collaborative survey of terrestrial wildlife populations using camera traps across the United States, compiled data across all 50 states during a 14-week period in 2019, representing a timely and standardized camera trap survey of the USA. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: June 28, 2021

2021 journal article

Seasonal Patterns in Daily Flight Distance and Space Use by Great Egrets (Ardea alba)

WATERBIRDS, 44(3), 343–355.

By: J. Brzorad*, M. Allen*, S. Jennings, E. Condeso, S. Elbin*, R. Kays*, D. Lumpkin, S. Schweitzer*, N. Tsipoura*, A. Maccarone*

author keywords: Ardea alba; central place; daily flight distances; GPS telemetry; Great Egret; home range; wading bird; wetlands; utilization distribution
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
14. Life Below Water (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: May 2, 2022

2021 article

The Movebank system for studying global animal movement and demography

Kays, R., Davidson, S. C., Berger, M., Bohrer, G., Fiedler, W., Flack, A., … Wikelski, M. (2021, December 12). METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, Vol. 12.

By: R. Kays n, S. Davidson*, M. Berger, G. Bohrer*, W. Fiedler*, A. Flack*, J. Hirt, C. Hahn ...

author keywords: animal behaviour; animal tracking; bio-logging; cyberinfrastructure; FAIR data; GPS; live data; movement
TL;DR: A case study demonstrating the use of Movebank to assess life‐history events and demography, and engage with citizen scientists to identify mortalities and causes of death for a migratory bird are presented. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
14. Life Below Water (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: December 13, 2021

2021 journal article

Tracking the decline of weasels in North America

PLOS ONE, 16(7).

By: D. Jachowski*, R. Kays n, A. Butler*, A. Hoylman & M. Gompper*

MeSH headings : Animals; Canada; Mustelidae / physiology; Population Dynamics; United States
TL;DR: The hypothesis that weasel populations have declined in North America is supported and the need for improved methods for detecting and monitoring weasels is highlighted, by identifying population declines for small carnivores that were formerly abundant across North America. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 30, 2021

2020 journal article

A Novel Framework to Protect Animal Data in a World of Ecosurveillance

BioScience, 70(6), 468–476.

By: R. Lennox*, R. Harcourt*, J. Bennett*, A. Davies*, A. Ford*, R. Frey*, M. Hayward, N. Hussey* ...

author keywords: Ecology; biotelemetry; biologging; species at risk; data security; poaching; data privacy
TL;DR: It is suggested that when designing animal tracking studies it is incumbent on scientists to consider the vulnerability of their study animals to risks arising from the implementation of the proposed program, and to take preventative measures. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: July 13, 2020

2020 journal article

An empirical evaluation of camera trap study design: How many, how long and when?

Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 11(6), 700–713.

Ed(s): D. Fisher

author keywords: camera traps; community ecology; detectability; mammals; relative abundance; species richness; study design; wildlife surveys
TL;DR: It was found that 25–35 camera sites were needed for precise estimates of species richness, depending on scale of the study, and the precision of species‐level estimates of occupancy was highly sensitive to occupancy level. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: April 20, 2020

2020 journal article

Animal species classification using deep neural networks with noise labels

Ecological Informatics, 57, 101063.

By: A. Ahmed*, H. Yousif*, R. Kays n & Z. He*

author keywords: Noisy labels; Deep neural networks; Clean network; K-means clustering
TL;DR: The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed robust learning method outperforms the state-of-the-art methods from the literature and achieved improved accuracy on animal species classification from camera-trap images with high levels of label noise. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: May 8, 2020

2020 journal article

Born‐digital biodiversity data: Millions and billions

Diversity and Distributions, 26(5), 644–648.

By: R. Kays n, W. McShea* & M. Wikelski*

Ed(s): D. Zurell

author keywords: animal tracking; big data; biodiversity; camera trapping; conservation; ecological modelling; specimens
TL;DR: This work urges institutions to recognize the future of born‐digital records and invest in proper curation and standards so they can make the most of these records to inform management, inspire conservation action and tell natural history stories about life on the planet. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: April 20, 2020

2020 article

COVID-19 lockdown allows researchers to quantify the effects of human activity on wildlife

Rutz, C., Loretto, M.-C., Bates, A. E., Davidson, S. C., Duarte, C. M., Jetz, W., … Cagnacci, F. (2020, September). NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, Vol. 4, pp. 1156–1159.

MeSH headings : Animals; Animals, Wild; Betacoronavirus; COVID-19; Coronavirus Infections; Ecosystem; Human Activities; Humans; Pandemics; Pneumonia, Viral; SARS-CoV-2
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: July 20, 2020

2020 journal article

Coyotes living near cities are bolder: implications for dog evolution and human-wildlife conflict

BEHAVIOUR, 157(3-4), 289–313.

By: J. Brooks*, R. Kays n & B. Hare*

author keywords: self-domestication; urban evolution; coyote wildlife management; urban coyotes; coyote boldness; human-wildlife conflict
TL;DR: Analysis of the reactions of coyotes to novel human artefacts at 575 sites across the state of North Carolina suggests that urban coyotes are experiencing selection for boldness and becoming more attracted tohuman artefacts. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: May 8, 2020

2020 dataset

Data from: The small home ranges and large local ecological impacts of pet cats [United States]

By: R. Kays*, R. Dunn, A. Parsons, B. Mcdonald, T. Perkins, S. Powers, L. Shell

Contributors: U. Konstanz

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2020 journal article

Diurnal timing of nonmigratory movement by birds: the importance of foraging spatial scales

JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY, 51(12).

By: J. Mallon*, M. Tucker*, A. Beard*, R. Bierregaard*, K. Bildstein*, K. Bohning-Gaese*, J. Brzorad*, E. Buechley* ...

author keywords: flight mode; foraging; movement ecology; multispecies; nonmigratory; temporal
TL;DR: Assessment of signals of eicher of chese scracegies are dececcable in the timing of activiry of daily, local movements by birds finds broad-scale foraging habicac explained less of ehe clustering paccerns, and the similarities of timing of movement activiry among species are compared. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
14. Life Below Water (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: January 19, 2021

2020 journal article

Does Use of Backyard Resources Explain the Abundance of Urban Wildlife?

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 8.

By: C. Hansen*, A. Parsons n, R. Kays n & J. Millspaugh*

author keywords: camera trap; mammal; relative abundance; species richness; supplemental feeding
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: November 24, 2020

2020 journal article

Ecological insights from three decades of animal movement tracking across a changing Arctic

SCIENCE, 370(6517), 712-+.

By: S. Davidson*, G. Bohrer*, E. Gurarie*, S. LaPoint*, P. Mahoney*, N. Boelman*, J. Eitel*, L. Prugh* ...

MeSH headings : Acclimatization; Animal Migration; Animals; Archives; Arctic Regions; Ecological Parameter Monitoring; Population
TL;DR: The new Arctic Animal Movement Archive (AAMA) is presented, a growing collection of more than 200 standardized terrestrial and marine animal tracking studies from 1991 to the present that illuminates the effects of climate change on multiple charismatic animal and bird species. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
14. Life Below Water (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: December 14, 2020

2020 journal article

author keywords: allometry; animal movement; area-based conservation; autocorrelation; home range; kernel density estimation; reserve design; scaling
MeSH headings : Animals; Body Size; Conservation of Natural Resources; Endangered Species; Homing Behavior; Humans; Mammals
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: July 6, 2020

2020 article

Estimating encounter location distributions from animal tracking data

Noonan, M. J., Martinez-Garcia, R., Davis, G. H., Crofoot, M. C., Kays, R., Hirsch, B. T., … Calabrese, J. M. (2020, August 25). (Vol. 8). Vol. 8.

By: M. Noonan*, R. Martinez-Garcia, G. Davis*, M. Crofoot*, R. Kays n, B. Hirsch*, D. Caillaud*, E. Payne* ...

TL;DR: This work introduces a new theoretical concept describing the long-term encounter location probabilities for movement within home ranges, termed the conditional distribution of encounters (CDE), and derives this distribution, as well as confidence intervals, and implements its statistical estimator into open source software. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Source: ORCID
Added: July 19, 2021

2020 journal article

Foraging movements are density-independent among straw-coloured fruit bats

ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE, 7(5).

By: M. Calderon-Capote*, D. Dechmann*, J. Fahr*, M. Wikelski*, R. Kays n & M. O'Mara*

author keywords: central place foraging; colony size; Old World fruit bats; resources; movement; migration
TL;DR: The relatively consistent foraging patterns across seasons and colonies indicate that these bats seek out roosts close to highly productive landscapes, which may help to explain why long-distance migration, otherwise rare in bats, evolved in this highly gregarious species. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: June 22, 2020

2020 journal article

High variability within pet foods prevents the identification of native species in pet cats’ diets using isotopic evaluation

PeerJ, 8, e8337.

By: B. McDonald n, T. Perkins n, R. Dunn n, J. McDonald*, H. Cole*, R. Feranec*, R. Kays n

author keywords: Felis catus; Carbon; Stable isotopes; Predation; Pet food; Nitrogen
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: February 10, 2020

2020 journal article

Precipitous decline of white-lipped peccary populations in Mesoamerica

Biological Conservation, 242, 108410.

By: D. Thornton*, R. Reyna*, L. Perera-Romero*, J. Radachowsky*, M. Hidalgo-Mihart*, R. Garcia*, R. McNab*, L. Mcloughlin* ...

author keywords: Distribution modelling; Large herbivores; Population decline; Neotropics; Range decline; White-lipped peccaries
TL;DR: To conserve white-lipped peccaries in Mesoamerica, transboundary efforts will be needed that focus on both forest conservation and hunting management, increased cross-border coordination, and reconsideration of country and regional conservation priorities. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: April 20, 2020

2020 journal article

The small home ranges and large local ecological impacts of pet cats

Animal Conservation, 23(5), 516–523.

By: R. Kays n, R. Dunn n, A. Parsons n, B. Mcdonald n, T. Perkins*, S. Powers*, L. Shell, J. McDonald* ...

author keywords: citizen science; domestic cats; GPS tracking; predation; urban ecology; home rage; carnivores; Felis catus
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID, Web Of Science
Added: September 14, 2020

2020 journal article

Wildlife response to recreational trail building: An experimental method and Appalachian case study

JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION, 56.

By: A. Miller n, R. Kays n & Y. Leung n

Contributors: A. Miller n, R. Kays n & Y. Leung n

author keywords: Before-after control-impact; Camera trap; Experiment; Occupancy; Recreation impact; Trails
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 24, 2020

2019 journal article

Animal Scanner: Software for classifying humans, animals, and empty frames in camera trap images

Ecology and Evolution, 9(4), 1578–1589.

By: H. Yousif*, J. Yuan*, R. Kays n & Z. He*

author keywords: background subtraction; camera trap images; deep convolutional neural networks; human-animal detection; wildlife monitoring
TL;DR: This work develops computer vision algorithms to detect and classify moving objects to aid the first step of camera trap image filtering—separating the animal detections from the empty frames and pictures of humans, thus improving the ability to monitor wildlife across large scales with camera traps. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: April 2, 2019

2019 journal article

Canid collision-expanding populations of coyotes (Canis latrans) and crab-eating foxes (Cerdocyon thous) meet up in Panama

JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 100(6), 1819–1830.

By: A. Hody n, R. Moreno*, N. Meyer*, K. Pacifici n & R. Kays n

author keywords: camera traps; coyote; crab-eating fox; data fusion; Great American Biotic Interchange; invasive species
TL;DR: If deforestation continues in the region, these two invasive canids could represent the first of a new, Not-So-Great American Biotic Interchange, where generalist species adapted to human disturbance cross continents and threaten native biota. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: February 10, 2020

2019 journal article

Children’s attitudes towards animals are similar across suburban, exurban, and rural areas

PeerJ, 7, e7328.

By: S. Schuttler*, K. Stevenson n, R. Kays n & R. Dunn n

author keywords: Children; Attitudes; Biodiversity; Animals; Urbanization; Native
TL;DR: Despite different levels of urbanization, children had either an unfamiliarity with and/or low preference for local animals, suggesting that a disconnect between children and local biodiversity is already well-established, even in more rural areas where many wildlife species can be found. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: July 23, 2019

2019 dataset

Data from: Eastern coyote home range, habitat selection and survival in the Albany pine bush landscape

By: D. Bogan & R. Kays*

Contributors: U. Konstanz

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2019 journal article

Effects on white‐tailed deer following eastern coyote colonization

The Journal of Wildlife Management, 83(4), 916–924.

By: E. Bragina n, R. Kays*, A. Hody n, C. Moorman n, C. Deperno n & L. Mills*

author keywords: eastern coyote; novel predator; population growth rate; predator-prey dynamics; spatial compensation
TL;DR: The hypothesis that coyotes, as a novel predator, would affect deer population dynamics across large spatial scales, and the strongest effects would occur after a time lag following initial coyote colonization, is tested. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: April 20, 2020

2019 journal article

Large birds travel farther in homogeneous environments

Global Ecology and Biogeography, 28(5), 576–587.

By: M. Tucker*, O. Alexandrou, R. Bierregaard*, K. Bildstein*, K. Böhning‐Gaese*, C. Bracis*, J. Brzorad*, E. Buechley* ...

Ed(s): V. Boucher-Lalonde

author keywords: enhanced vegetation index; landscape complementation; movement ecology; productivity; spatial behaviour; terrestrial birds; waterbirds
TL;DR: It is suggested that longer movements in homogeneous environments might reflect the need for different habitat types associated with foraging and reproduction as habitat homogenization increases, it might force birds to travel increasingly longer distances to meet their diverse needs. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
14. Life Below Water (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: June 17, 2019

2019 journal article

Local host-tick coextinction in neotropical forest fragments

International Journal for Parasitology, 49(3-4), 225–233.

author keywords: Biodiversity loss; Host-parasite interactions; Forest fragmentation; Defaunation; Extinction cascade; Host specificity; Panama
MeSH headings : Animals; Animals, Wild / growth & development; Biodiversity; Extinction, Biological; Forests; Panama; Ticks / growth & development; Tropical Climate; Vertebrates / growth & development
TL;DR: These findings support the host-parasite coextinction hypothesis, and indicate that loss of wildlife can indeed have cascading effects on tick communities, and imply that opportunities for pathogen transmission via generalist ticks may be higher in habitats with degraded tick communities. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: May 13, 2019

2019 journal article

Scale-insensitive estimation of speed and distance traveled from animal tracking data

MOVEMENT ECOLOGY, 7(1).

By: M. Noonan*, C. Fleming*, T. Akre*, J. Drescher-Lehman*, E. Gurarie*, A. Harrison*, R. Kays*, J. Calabrese*

author keywords: Continuous-time; correlated velocity; ctmm; GPS; movement models; step length; telemetry; travel distance
TL;DR: It was found that SLD estimates varied substantially with sampling frequency, whereas CTSD provided relatively consistent estimates, with often dramatic improvements over SLD, when applied to empirical GPS data. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: December 9, 2019

2019 journal article

Semantic region of interest and species classification in the deep neural network feature domain

Ecological Informatics, 52, 57–68.

By: A. Ahmed*, H. Yousif*, R. Kays n & Z. He*

author keywords: Animal species classification; Deep neural networks; Semantic regions; Graph cut
TL;DR: This paper uses a deep neural network model training for animal- background image classification to analyze the input camera-trap images to generate a multi-level visual representation of the input image, and detects semantic regions of interest for animals from this representation using k-mean clustering and graph cut in the DNN feature domain. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: July 15, 2019

2019 journal article

The ocean’s movescape: fisheries management in the bio-logging decade (2018–2028)

ICES Journal of Marine Science, 76(2), 477–488.

Ed(s): H. Browman

author keywords: bio-logging; fisheries; ICARUS; movement ecology; telemetry; tracking
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: May 13, 2019

2019 journal article

Urbanization focuses carnivore activity in remaining natural habitats, increasing species interactions

Journal of Applied Ecology, 56(8), 1894–1904.

By: A. Parsons n, C. Rota*, T. Forrester*, M. Baker‐Whatton*, W. McShea*, S. Schuttler*, J. Millspaugh*, R. Kays n

Ed(s): H. Wheeler

author keywords: camera traps; carnivore; citizen science; distribution; green space; occupancy; species interactions; urbanization
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 19, 2019

2019 journal article

White‐tailed deer and coyote colonization: a response to Kilgo et al. (2019)

The Journal of Wildlife Management, 83(8), 1641–1643.

By: E. Bragina*, R. Kays*, A. Hody n, C. Moorman n, C. DePerno & L. Mills*

TL;DR: The finding that coyotes have not had large‐scale effects on white‐tailed deer population growth in eastern North America is reaffirmed and the finding that predator‐prey dynamic is variable over space or time is elaborated on. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: October 28, 2019

2019 journal article

Wildlife Insights: A Platform to Maximize the Potential of Camera Trap and Other Passive Sensor Wildlife Data for the Planet

Environmental Conservation, 47(1), 1–6.

By: J. Ahumada*, E. Fegraus*, T. Birch*, N. Flores*, R. Kays*, T. O’Brien*, J. Palmer*, S. Schuttler* ...

author keywords: artificial intelligence; camera traps; data analysis; data sharing; protected areas; technology platform; wildlife
TL;DR: This work identifies four barriers that are hindering the widespread use of camera trap data for conservation and proposes specific solutions to remove these barriers integrated in a modern technology platform called Wildlife Insights. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: November 24, 2020

2018 dataset

Canis latrans: Kays, R.

IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

Roland Kays

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: November 24, 2020

2018 journal article

Citizen Science in Schools: Students Collect Valuable Mammal Data for Science, Conservation, and Community Engagement

BioScience, 69(1), 69–79.

By: S. Schuttler*, R. Sears n, I. Orendain*, R. Khot*, D. Rubenstein*, N. Rubenstein*, R. Dunn n, E. Baird* ...

author keywords: citizen science; camera traps; mammals; education; community conservation
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: April 15, 2019

2018 dataset

Data from: New York State bald eagle report 2010

By: P. Nye, G. Hewitt, T. Swenson & R. Kays*

Contributors: U. Konstanz

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2018 journal article

High genomic diversity and candidate genes under selection associated with range expansion in eastern coyote (Canis latrans ) populations

Ecology and Evolution, 8(24), 12641–12655.

By: E. Heppenheimer*, K. Brzeski*, J. Hinton*, B. Patterson*, L. Rutledge*, A. DeCandia*, T. Wheeldon*, S. Fain* ...

author keywords: colonization; dispersal behavior; outlier SNPs; RADseq; range expansion
TL;DR: This study identifies genes associated with dispersal capabilities in coyotes on the two eastern expansion fronts of a highly mobile carnivore, the coyote, to investigate patterns of genomic diversity and identify variants that may have been under selection during range expansion. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: January 14, 2019

2018 journal article

Historically native to open country in the West, this canid now lives in all habitats across the continent

Natural History Magazine, 126(7), 22–27.

By: R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

2018 journal article

Hot monkey, cold reality: surveying rainforest canopy mammals using drone-mounted thermal infrared sensors

International Journal of Remote Sensing, 40(2), 407–419.

By: R. Kays n, J. Sheppard*, K. Mclean*, C. Welch*, C. Paunescu*, V. Wang*, G. Kravit*, M. Crofoot*

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: February 18, 2019

2018 journal article

Is the Red Wolf a Listable Unit Under the US Endangered Species Act?

Journal of Heredity, 109(5), 585–597.

By: R. Waples*, R. Kays n, R. Fredrickson*, K. Pacifici n & L. Mills*

author keywords: de-listing; distinct population segment; hybrid policy; hybridization; listing criteria; taxonomy
MeSH headings : Animals; Behavior, Animal; Ecosystem; Endangered Species; Hybridization, Genetic; United States; Wolves / genetics; Wolves / physiology
TL;DR: A case study of the red wolf from the southeastern United States concludes that under any proposed evolutionary scenario red wolves meet both criteria to be considered a DPS: they are Discrete compared with other conspecific populations, and they are Significant to the taxon to which they belong. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2018 journal article

Joint Temporal Point Pattern Models for Proximate Species Occurrence in a Fixed Area Using Camera Trap Data

Journal of Agricultural, Biological and Environmental Statistics, 23(3), 334–357.

By: E. Schliep*, A. Gelfand*, J. Clark* & R. Kays*

author keywords: Circular time; Fourier series representation; Hierarchical model; Linear time; Multivariate log-Gaussian Cox process; Nonhomogeneous Poisson process
TL;DR: It is shown that a multivariate log-Gaussian Cox process incorporating both circular and linear time provides a preferred choice for modeling occurrence of forest mammals based on daily activity rhythms and rich inference is obtained under a hierarchical Bayesian framework with an efficient Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling algorithm. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: October 19, 2018

2018 journal article

Mammal communities are larger and more diverse in moderately developed areas

ELife, 7.

MeSH headings : Animals; Biodiversity; Cities; Conservation of Natural Resources / methods; Conservation of Natural Resources / statistics & numerical data; Ecosystem; Forests; Humans; Mammals / classification; Mammals / growth & development; Rural Population / statistics & numerical data; Suburban Population / statistics & numerical data; Urban Population / statistics & numerical data; Urban Renewal / statistics & numerical data
TL;DR: It is shown that developed areas actually had significantly higher or statistically similar mammalian occupancy, relative abundance, richness and diversity compared to wild areas. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: October 16, 2018

2018 journal article

Mapping the expansion of coyotes (Canis latrans) across North and Central America

ZooKeys, 759(759), 81–97.

By: J. Hody & R. Kays*

author keywords: coyote; Canis latrans; range expansion; museum records; FAUNMAP; VertNet; historical ecology; Holocene
TL;DR: A detailed account of the original range of coyotes and their subsequent expansion provides the core description of a large scale ecological experiment that can help to better understand the predator-prey interactions, as well as evolution through hybridization. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2018 journal article

Moving in the Anthropocene: Global reductions in terrestrial mammalian movements

Science, 359(6374), 466–469.

By: M. Tucker*, K. Böhning-Gaese*, W. Fagan*, J. Fryxell*, B. Van Moorter*, S. Alberts*, A. Ali, A. Allen* ...

MeSH headings : Animal Migration; Animals; Geographic Information Systems; Human Activities; Humans; Mammals
TL;DR: Using a unique GPS-tracking database of 803 individuals across 57 species, it is found that movements of mammals in areas with a comparatively high human footprint were on average one-half to one-third the extent of their movements in area with a low human footprint. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2018 journal article

Object detection from dynamic scene using joint background modeling and fast deep learning classification

JOURNAL OF VISUAL COMMUNICATION AND IMAGE REPRESENTATION, 55, 802–815.

By: H. Yousif*, J. Yuan*, R. Kays n & Z. He*

author keywords: Human-animal detection; Camera-trap images; Background subtraction; Deep convolutional neural networks; Wildlife monitoring
TL;DR: This paper introduces a new block-wise background model, named as Minimum Feature Difference (MFD), to model the variation of the background of the camera-trap sequences and generate the foreground object proposals, and develops a region proposals verification to reduce the number of false alarms. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: October 16, 2018

2018 journal article

Population Genomic Analysis of North American Eastern Wolves (Canis lycaon) Supports Their Conservation Priority Status

Genes, 9(12), 606.

By: E. Heppenheimer*, R. Harrigan*, L. Rutledge, K. Koepfli*, A. DeCandia*, K. Brzeski*, J. Benson*, T. Wheeldon* ...

author keywords: canine; geographic isolation; spatial structure; restriction-site associated DNA; conservation genomics
TL;DR: A population genomics approach is used to uncover spatial patterns of variation in 281 canids in central Ontario and the Great Lakes region, which represents the first genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) dataset with substantial sample sizes of representative populations. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: January 21, 2019

2018 journal article

Revised distributional estimates for the recently discovered olinguito (Bassaricyon neblina), with comments on natural and taxonomic history

JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 99(2), 321–332.

author keywords: Andes; citizen science; conservation; distribution; ecological niche modeling; ecotourism; Neotropical; olinguito; Procyonidae
TL;DR: This study improves knowledge of the olinguito's range, increases the understanding of this species' natural and taxonomic history, and provides an example of modeling the distributions of poorly known species with small sample sizes. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2018 chapter

Stink or swim: techniques to meet the challenges for the study and conservation of small critters that hide, swim, or climb, and may otherwise make themselves unpleasant

In D. Macdonald, L. Harrington, & C. Newman (Eds.), Biology and Conservation of Musteloids (pp. 216–230).

By: R. Powell, S. Ellwood, R. Kays* & T. Maran

Ed(s): D. Macdonald, L. Harrington & C. Newman

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: December 4, 2020

2018 journal article

The value of citizen science for ecological monitoring of mammals

PeerJ, 6, e4536.

author keywords: Wildlife monitoring; Seasonal patterns; Citizen science; Wildlife management; Camera traps
TL;DR: Two studies that worked with volunteers to set camera traps for ecological surveys show how, with the right tools, training and survey design protocols, citizen science can be used to answer a variety of applied management questions while connecting participants with their secretive mammal neighbors. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2017 journal article

Citizen science and biophilic cities: the great experiment

Biophilic Cities, 1(1), 22–27.

By: R. Costello, W. McShea, T. Forrester, A. Parsons, S. Schuttler, M. Baker-Whatton, R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: November 30, 2020

2017 journal article

Coupling visitor and wildlife monitoring in protected areas using camera traps

Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, 17, 44–53.

By: A. Miller*, Y. Leung n & R. Kays n

Contributors: A. Miller*, Y. Leung n & R. Kays n

author keywords: Monitoring; Camera trap; Protected area management; Recreation; Trail
TL;DR: It is concluded that camera traps can accurately quantify human trail-based activity while being set to wildlife science standards, reducing the cost of collecting visitor use data and producing high-resolution human-wildlife interaction data. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2017 journal article

Creating advocates for mammal conservation through citizen science

Biological Conservation, 208, 98–105.

author keywords: Camera trap; Conservation attitudes; Informal education; Social network; Wildlife
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2017 journal article

Defense of an expanded historical range for the Mexican wolf: A comment on Heffelfinger et al.

The Journal of Wildlife Management, 81(8), 1331–1333.

TL;DR: It is asserted that reintroductions and wildlife management plans should develop definitive expectations based on evolutionary hypotheses, and use genetic data to test them, and for the primacy of genetic data is argued. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2017 journal article

Do occupancy or detection rates from camera traps reflect deer density?

Journal of Mammalogy, 98(6), 1547–1557.

By: A. Parsons n, T. Forrester*, W. McShea*, M. Baker-Whatton*, J. Millspaugh* & R. Kays n

author keywords: abundance index; camera trap; citizen science; density; detection rate; occupancy; Odocoileus virginianus; protected area management; white-tailed deer
TL;DR: Estimating density, occupancy, and detection rate of male white-tailed deer using camera-trap data collected from 1,199 cameras across 20 study sites suggested different ecological relationships associated with the metrics. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2017 conference paper

Fast human-animal detection from highly cluttered camera-trap images using joint background modeling and deep learning classification

2017 ieee international symposium on circuits and systems (iscas).

By: H. Yousif*, J. Yuan*, R. Kays n & Z. He*

TL;DR: This paper develops an effective background modeling and subtraction scheme to generate region proposals for the foreground objects and performs complexity-accuracy analysis of deep convolutional neural networks to develop a fast deep learning classification scheme. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: NC State University Libraries, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2017 journal article

Free-ranging domestic cats (Felis catus) on public lands: estimating density, activity, and diet in the Florida Keys

Biological Invasions, 20(2), 333–344.

By: M. Cove n, B. Gardner*, T. Simons n, R. Kays n & A. O’Connell*

author keywords: Felis catus; Free-ranging domestic cats; Predators; Spatial capture-recapture; Stable isotopes; Trap-neuter-release
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that cat groups within a population move different distances, exhibit different activity patterns, and that individuals consume wildlife at different rates, which all have implications for managing this invasive predator. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2017 chapter

Kinkajou: the tree top specialist

In D. Macdonald, C. Newman, & L. A. Harrington (Eds.), Biology and Conservation of Musteloids (pp. 493–501). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

By: M. Brooks & R. Kays

Ed(s): D. Macdonald, C. Newman & L. Harrington

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: November 30, 2020

2017 journal article

Managed forest as habitat for gray brocket deer (Mazama gouazoubira) in agricultural landscapes of southeastern Brazil

Journal of Mammalogy, 98(5), 1301–1309.

By: T. Rodrigues*, R. Kays n, A. Parsons n, N. Versiani*, R. Paolino*, N. Pasqualotto*, V. Krepschi*, A. Chiarello*

author keywords: camera trapping; Cerrado; herbivores; land use; occupancy
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2017 journal article

Northeastern coyotes cannot be a distinct species without isolation: a response to Way and Lynn

Canid Biology & Conservation, 20(2), 5–6. http://www.canids.org/CBC/20/northeastern_coyote_not_a_species.pdf

By: R. Kays & J. Monzón

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: November 30, 2020

2017 conference paper

Object segmentation in the deep neural network feature domain from highly cluttered natural scenes

2017 IEEE International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP), 3095–3099.

By: H. Yousif*, Z. He* & R. Kays n

Event: 2017 IEEE International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP)

TL;DR: A fast and efficient design of the DCNN is explored which finds a good trade-off between complexity and the classification-segmentation performance, and outperforms existing state-of-the-art methods on the camera-trap dataset with highly cluttered natural scenes. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: NC State University Libraries, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2017 chapter

Track Annotation: Determining the Environmental Context of Movement Through the Air

In Aeroecology (pp. 71–86).

TL;DR: This chapter will provide several examples for empirical movement models that explain the movement characteristic as driven by the environmental conditions during flight, despite the highly dynamic, complex, and scale-dependent structures of both the flight path and atmospheric variables. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: November 24, 2020

2016 journal article

A community effort to document wildlife: eMammal project expands the impact of citizen scientists

The Wildlife Professional, 38–41.

By: B. Kays, T. Forrester & W. Mcshea

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: January 30, 2021

2016 journal article

A hypothesis for the disagreement between nuclear and mitochondrial DNA of North American Canis: an eletter response to Whole-genome sequence analysis shows that two endemic species of North American wolf are admixtures of the coyote and gray wolf

Science Advances, 2(7), e1501714.

By: R. Kays

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2016 journal article

A multispecies occupancy model for two or more interacting species

Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 7(10), 1164–1173.

Ed(s): D. Warton

author keywords: community; competition; eMammal; interspecific interactions; multinomial logit; multinomial probit; multivariate Bernoulli; occupancymodelling; predation
TL;DR: The proposed method improves the ability to draw inference from such communities by permitting modelling of detection/non‐detection data from an arbitrary number of species, without assuming asymmetric interactions, and permits modelling the probability two or more species occur together as a function of environmental variables. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2016 journal article

A two-species occupancy model accommodating simultaneous spatial and interspecific dependence

Ecology, 97(1), 48–53.

author keywords: coyote (Canis latrans); data augmentation; detection probability; eMammal; geostatistical model; hierarchical models; interacting species; point-referenced model; red fox (Vulpes vulpes); spatial statistics
MeSH headings : Animal Distribution / physiology; Animals; Coyotes / physiology; Foxes / physiology; Models, Biological; Models, Statistical; Species Specificity
TL;DR: A two-species occupancy model that accommodates both interspecific and spatial dependence is proposed and a point-referenced multivariate hierarchical spatial model is used to account for both spatial and interspecific dependence. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2016 journal article

Admixture mapping identifies introgressed genomic regions in North American canids

Molecular Ecology, 25(11), 2443–2453.

By: B. vonHoldt*, R. Kays*, J. Pollinger* & R. Wayne*

author keywords: admixture; ancestry; canids; introgression
MeSH headings : Alleles; Animals; Chromosome Mapping; Coyotes / genetics; Gene Flow; Genetics, Population; Genomics; Hybridization, Genetic; North America; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Wolves / genetics
TL;DR: It is shown that grey wolf and coyote admixture has far‐reaching effects and, in addition to phenotypically transforming admixed populations, allows for the differential movement of alleles from different parental species to be tested in new genomic backgrounds. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 24, 2021

2016 journal article

An Open Standard for Camera Trap Data

Biodiversity Data Journal, 4, e10197.

By: T. Forrester*, T. O'Brien*, E. Fegraus*, P. Jansen*, J. Palmer*, R. Kays n, J. Ahumada*, B. Stern*, W. McShea*

author keywords: big data; biodiversity; camera trap; data repository; data schema
TL;DR: The Camera Trap Metadata Standard is presented as an open data standard for storing and sharing camera trap data, developed by experts from a variety of organizations to help researchers standardize data terms, align past data to new repositories, and provide a framework for utilizing data across repositories and research projects to advance animal ecology and conservation. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 21, 2021

2016 book

Candid Creatures : how camera traps reveal the mysteries of nature

By: R. Kays*

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2016 journal article

Deer on the lookout: how hunting, hiking and coyotes affect white-tailed deer vigilance

Journal of Zoology, 301(4), 320–327.

author keywords: vigilance; white-tailed deer; apex predators; coyote; hunting; recreation; camera traps; predation risk
TL;DR: The results show that variation in coyote and human activity does not significantly impact the vigilance behavior of white-tailed deer year-round, suggesting that deer rely on other risk-avoidance behaviors or neither are functioning as apex predators in the region. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2016 journal article

Differential Habitat Use or Intraguild Interactions: What Structures a Carnivore Community?

PLOS ONE, 11(1), e0146055.

By: M. Gompper*, D. Lesmeister*, J. Ray*, J. Malcolm* & R. Kays n

Ed(s): A. Reed

MeSH headings : Animal Distribution; Animals; Conservation of Natural Resources; Ecosystem; Forests; Models, Biological; Mustelidae / physiology; New York; Population Density; Raccoons / physiology; Ursidae / physiology
TL;DR: Assessing this carnivore community in New York's Adirondack landscape concludes that differential habitat use is more important than species interactions in maintaining the distribution and structure ofThis carnivore guild. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2016 journal article

Does hunting or hiking affect wildlife communities in protected areas?

Journal of Applied Ecology, 54(1), 242–252.

Ed(s): J. du Toit

author keywords: camera trap; citizen science; hiking; hunting; mammals; park; protected area; protected forest; recreation; wildlife communities
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2016 chapter

Involving Citizen Scientists in Biodiversity Observation

In The GEO Handbook on Biodiversity Observation Networks (pp. 211–237).

By: M. Chandler*, L. See*, C. Buesching*, J. Cousins*, C. Gillies*, R. Kays n, C. Newman*, H. Pereira*, P. Tiago*

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: November 27, 2020

2016 journal article

Long-distance dispersal of a subadult male cougar from South Dakota to Connecticut documented with DNA evidence

Journal of Mammalogy, 97(5), 1435–1440.

By: J. Hawley, P. Rego*, A. Wydeven*, M. Schwartz*, T. Viner*, R. Kays*, K. Pilgrim, J. Jenks

author keywords: Black Hills; Connecticut; eastern cougar; long-distance dispersal; Minnesota; mountain lion; Puma concolor; South Dakota; Wisconsin
TL;DR: Evidence collected for this one animal, and complete absence of verifiable data from most anecdotal reports of cougars in the east, further confirms the lack of a breeding population in the region. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2016 journal article

Scaling-up camera traps: monitoring the planet's biodiversity with networks of remote sensors

Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 15(1), 26–34.

By: R. Steenweg*, M. Hebblewhite*, R. Kays n, J. Ahumada*, J. Fisher*, C. Burton*, S. Townsend, C. Carbone* ...

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2016 journal article

The ecological impact of humans and dogs on wildlife in protected areas in eastern North America

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 203, 75–88.

By: A. Parsons*, C. Bland n, T. Forrester*, M. Baker-Whatton*, S. Schuttler*, W. McShea*, R. Costello*, R. Kays n

author keywords: Camera traps; Coyote; Hikers; Domestic dog; Protected areas; Risk-disturbance
TL;DR: Investigating how humans, dogs and coyotes used protected areas and behavioral responses by three prey species indicated that humans are perceived as a greater risk than coyotes, and this increases when dogs accompany their owners. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2016 journal article

Visual Informatics Tools for Supporting Large-Scale Collaborative Wildlife Monitoring with Citizen Scientists

IEEE Circuits and Systems Magazine, 16(1), 73–86.

By: Z. He*, R. Kays*, Z. Zhang*, G. Ning*, C. Huang*, T. Han*, J. Millspaugh*, T. Forrester*, W. McShea*

TL;DR: Various aspects of the design of integrated camera-sensor networking systems, including image processing and computer vision algorithms for animal detection, segmentation, tracking, species classification, and biometric feature extraction, and applications to wildlife and ecological research are covered. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2016 journal article

Wildlife speed cameras: measuring animal travel speed and day range using camera traps

Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation, 2(2), 84–94.

Ed(s): N. Pettorelli

author keywords: Animal tracking; image analysis; length-biased distributions; movement ecology; travel distance; video capture
TL;DR: This work describes and validate an entirely new alternative approach, using camera traps recording passing animals to measure movement paths at very fine scale, and concludes that these methods are accurate and ready to use for estimating travel speed and day range in wildlife. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 24, 2021

2015 personal communication

Carnivore coexistence: America's recovery

Gompper, M. E., Belant, J. L., & Kays, R. (2015, January 23).

By: M. Gompper*, J. Belant* & R. Kays n

MeSH headings : Animals; Conservation of Natural Resources; Humans; Lynx; Mustelidae; Ursidae; Wolves
TL;DR: In their Report “Recovery of large carnivores in Europe's modern human-dominated landscapes” (19 December 2014), G. Chapron et al. attribute the return of predators in Europe to a “coexistence” model for conservation, in which carnivores and humans inhabit shared landscapes. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2015 journal article

Cats are rare where coyotes roam

Journal of Mammalogy, 96(5), 981–987.

By: R. Kays*, R. Costello, T. Forrester, M. Baker, A. Parsons, E. Kalies, G. Hess*, J. Millspaugh, W. McShea

author keywords: camera trap; Canis latrans; citizen science; Felis catus; invasive species; protected areas
TL;DR: It is suggested that the ecological impact of free-ranging cats in the region is concentrated in urban areas or other sites, such as islands, with few coyotes, and that coyotes and cats overlap the most in small urban forests. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2015 dataset

Data from: Shared decision-making drives collective movement in wild baboons

By: M. Crofoot, R. Kays* & M. Wikelski

Contributors: U. Konstanz

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2015 report

Data from: Stink or swim: techniques to meet the challenges for the study and conservation of small critters that hide, swim or climb and may otherwise make themselves unpleasant.

[Dataset].

By: R. Kays & B. Hirsch

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 13, 2022

2015 journal article

Emerging Technologies to Conserve Biodiversity

Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 30(11), 685–696.

By: S. Pimm*, S. Alibhai*, R. Bergl*, A. Dehgan*, C. Giri*, Z. Jewell*, L. Joppa*, R. Kays n, S. Loarie*

MeSH headings : Animals; Biodiversity; Conservation of Natural Resources / methods; Ecology / methods; Ecosystem; Plants; Remote Sensing Technology; Statistics as Topic
TL;DR: Challenges include assembling a wider public to crowdsource data, managing the massive quantities of data generated, and developing solutions to rapidly emerging threats. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2015 journal article

Identification of Novel Gammaherpesviruses in Ocelots (Leopardus pardalis) and Bobcats (Lynx rufus) in Panama and Colorado, USA

Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 51(4), 911–915.

By: C. Lozano*, L. Sweanor*, G. Wilson-Henjum*, R. Kays*, R. Moreno*, S. VandeWoude*, R. Troyer*

author keywords: Bobcat; gammaherpesvirus; herpesvirus; Leopardus pardalis; Lynx rufus; ocelot; virus
MeSH headings : Animals; Animals, Wild; Colorado / epidemiology; Felidae; Gammaherpesvirinae / genetics; Gammaherpesvirinae / isolation & purification; Herpesviridae Infections / epidemiology; Herpesviridae Infections / veterinary; Herpesviridae Infections / virology; Panama / epidemiology; Phylogeny
TL;DR: A novel GHV glycoprotein B sequence in two ocelots and a second novel sequence in a bobcat is identified, which is distinct from the previously characterized bobcat GHV (Lynx rufus GHV 1), suggesting that a cluster of felid GHVs exists within the Percavirus genus. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 24, 2021

2015 journal article

Prescribed fire affects female white-tailed deer habitat use during summer lactation

Forest Ecology and Management, 348, 220–225.

author keywords: Fire-return interval; Longleaf pine; Pinus palustris; Compositional analysis; Cover; Odocoileus virginianus
TL;DR: Female deer increased selection of burned areas as years-since-fire increased, likely because there was a temporary loss of cover immediately following fire with plants slowly regenerating the subsequent growing seasons and to avoid areas depleted of cover. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2015 journal article

Terrestrial animal tracking as an eye on life and planet

Science, 348(6240), aaa2478–aaa2478.

MeSH headings : Animal Migration; Animals; Behavior, Animal; Environmental Monitoring / methods; Geographic Information Systems; Movement; Spatio-Temporal Analysis
TL;DR: It is suggested that a golden age of animal tracking science has begun and that the upcoming years will be a time of unprecedented exciting discoveries. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2015 journal article

Volunteer-run cameras as distributed sensors for macrosystem mammal research

Landscape Ecology, 31(1), 55–66.

author keywords: Camera traps; Cyberinfrastructure; Standard metadata; Citizen science; eMammal; Macrosystem
TL;DR: The eMammal program demonstrates that volunteer-based camera trapping can meet landscape scale spatial data needs, while also engaging the public in nature and science, and asserts that camera surveys can be effectively scaled to a macrosystem level through citizen science, but only after solving challenges of data and volunteer management. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2014 conference paper

Deep convolutional neural network based species recognition for wild animal monitoring

2014 IEEE International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP). Presented at the 2014 IEEE International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP).

By: G. Chen, T. Han, Z. He, R. Kays n & T. Forrester n

Event: 2014 IEEE International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP)

TL;DR: This is the first attempt to the fully automatic computer vision based species recognition on the real camera-trap images, and it is clear that the proposed deep convolutional neural networkbased species recognition achieves superior performance. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2014 chapter

Density estimation using camera trap surveys: the random encounter model

In P. Meek & P. Fleming (Eds.), Camera Trapping: Wildlife Management and Research (pp. 317–323). CSIRO Publishing.

By: J. Rowcliffe, C. Carbone, R. Kays, B. Kranstauber & P. Jansen

Ed(s): P. Meek & P. Fleming

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 7, 2021

2014 journal article

Environmental drivers of variability in the movement ecology of turkey vultures ( Cathartes aura ) in North and South America

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 369(1643), 20130195.

By: S. Dodge*, G. Bohrer*, K. Bildstein*, S. Davidson*, R. Weinzierl*, M. Bechard*, D. Barber*, R. Kays* ...

author keywords: avian scavengers; vultures; movement ecology; migration; geographical variability; remote-sensing observations
MeSH headings : Adaptation, Physiological / physiology; Animal Migration / physiology; Animals; Birds / physiology; Ecosystem; Logistic Models; North America; Satellite Imagery / methods; Seasons; South America
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
14. Life Below Water (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2014 journal article

Food acquisition and predator avoidance in a Neotropical rodent

Animal Behaviour, 88, 41–48.

author keywords: camera trapping; daily activity patterns; Dasyprocta punctata; foraging-predation trade-off; Leopardus pardalis; optimal foraging; predation pressure; predator-prey interactions; radiotelemetry; risk allocation hypothesis
TL;DR: This study provides quantitative empirical evidence of prey animals concentrating their activity at times of relatively low predation risk by using automated telemetry, manual radiotelemetry and camera trapping to test whether activity at high risk times declined with food availability as predicted in a Neotropical forest rodent, the Central American agouti, Dasyprocta punctata. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2014 journal article

How long is enough to detect terrestrial animals? Estimating the minimum trapping effort on camera traps

PeerJ, 2, e374.

By: X. Si*, R. Kays* & P. Ding*

author keywords: Animal inventory; Species richness; Gutianshan; Wildlife monitoring; Species accumulation curves; Sampling effort; Camera day
TL;DR: A two-year camera trapping dataset from a small study plot in Gutianshan National Nature Reserve, eastern China is taken advantage of to estimate the minimum trapping effort actually needed to sample the wildlife community and the relative value of adding new camera sites or running cameras for a longer period at one site. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2014 journal article

Mammals in and around suburban yards, and the attraction of chicken coops

Urban Ecosystems, 17(3), 691–705.

By: R. Kays* & A. Parsons*

author keywords: Chicken coops; Camera traps; Predators; Suburban wildlife
TL;DR: An encouraging sign of how humans can coexist with wildlife, even in urban areas, is shown and some strategies to minimize conflict regarding backyard chicken coops and dogs are suggested. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2014 journal article

Mesopredator release facilitates range expansion in fisher

Animal Conservation, 18(1), 50–61.

By: S. LaPoint*, J. Belant* & R. Kays n

author keywords: fisher; mesocarnivore; mesopredator release hypothesis; intraguild predation; predator communities; meta-analysis; range contraction; range expansion
TL;DR: Data support the hypothesis that a reduced predator community is contributing to the geographic variation in modern fishers' range expansion, and measurements of museum specimens suggest that individuals within released populations have evolved a larger body size since the time of their most contracted range, which may help them hunt larger prey species that are expected to be more available in the absence of larger carnivores. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2014 journal article

Patterns of Mortality in a Wild Population of White-Footed Mice

Northeastern Naturalist, 21(2), 323–336.

By: C. Collins* & R. Kays*

TL;DR: The results suggest that, to the extent that predation risk is dependent on heritable phenotypes, predationrisk is the most important evolutionary force acting on mortality in the population of Peromyscus leucopus that was studied. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
3. Good Health and Well-being (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2014 journal article

Quantifying levels of animal activity using camera trap data

Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 5(11), 1170–1179.

Ed(s): D. Fisher

author keywords: activity level; activity time; circular kernel; proportion active; remote sensors; Von Mises distribution; weighted kernel
TL;DR: A new method to estimate activity level with time‐of‐detection data from camera traps, fitting a flexible circular distribution to these data to describe the underlying activity schedule, and calculating overall proportion of time active from this is presented. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2014 journal article

Recommended guiding principles for reporting on camera trapping research

Biodiversity and Conservation, 23(9), 2321–2343.

By: P. Meek*, G. Ballard*, A. Claridge*, R. Kays*, K. Moseby*, T. O’Brien*, A. O’Connell, J. Sanderson* ...

author keywords: Remote cameras; Trail cameras; Camera trap guidelines; Ecological monitoring; Camera trap methodology
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2014 journal article

Selection and spatial arrangement of rest sites within northern tamandua home ranges

Journal of Zoology, 293(3), 160–170.

author keywords: tamandua; selection; telemetry; accelerometry; Panama; rest site; sleep
TL;DR: The models identified considerable individual variation in rest site selection, which suggests that the practice of pooling individuals and fitting models at an aggregate level may be inappropriate for certain types of habitat selection research. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2013 journal article

Animal behavior, cost-based corridor models, and real corridors

Landscape Ecology, 28(8), 1615–1630.

By: S. LaPoint*, P. Gallery*, M. Wikelski* & R. Kays*

author keywords: Animal movement; Carnivore; Circuit theory; Connectivity; Conservation; Fisher; Least-cost path; Martes pennanti
TL;DR: It is suggested that fishers use corridors to connect disjunct habitat fragments, animal movement data can be used to identify corridors at local scales, camera traps are useful tools for testing corridor model predictions, and that corridor models can be improved by incorporating animal behavior data. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2013 journal article

Assessment of coyote-wolf-dog admixture using ancestry-informative diagnostic SNPs

Molecular Ecology, 23(1), 182–197.

By: J. Monzón*, R. Kays n & D. Dykhuizen*

author keywords: admixture; Canis; diagnostic markers; hybridization; single-nucleotide polymorphism
MeSH headings : Animals; Bayes Theorem; Coyotes / genetics; Dogs / genetics; Female; Genetic Variation; Genetics, Population; Genotype; Hybridization, Genetic; Male; Ohio; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Wolves / genetics
TL;DR: This study is the most comprehensive genetic survey of admixture in eastern coyotes and demonstrates that the frequency and scope of hybridization can be quantified with relatively few ancestry‐informative markers. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2013 journal article

Attraction and avoidance detection from movements

Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment, 7(3), 157–168.

By: Z. Li*, B. Ding*, F. Wu*, T. Lei*, R. Kays* & M. Crofoot*

TL;DR: A novel method to measure the significance value of relationship between any two objects by examining the background model of their movements via permutation test is proposed and two effective pruning strategies are developed to reduce the computation time. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 24, 2021

2013 journal article

Automated identification of animal species in camera trap images

EURASIP JOURNAL ON IMAGE AND VIDEO PROCESSING.

By: X. Yu*, J. Wang*, R. Kays*, P. Jansen*, T. Wang* & T. Huang*

author keywords: Species identification; SIFT; cLBP; Feature learning; Max pooling; Weighted sparse coding
TL;DR: An automated species identification method for wildlife pictures captured by remote camera traps that uses improved sparse coding spatial pyramid matching (ScSPM), which extracts dense SIFT descriptor and cell-structured LBP as the local features and generates global feature via weighted sparse coding and max pooling using multi-scale pyramid kernel. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2013 journal article

Clarifying assumptions behind the estimation of animal density from camera trap rates

The Journal of Wildlife Management, 77(5), 876–876.

TL;DR: A useful review of density estimation from camera trap data, concluding with an important call for increased rigor and transparency in study design and critique of a recent effort to estimate density of species that cannot be recognized individually, the random encounter model. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2013 journal article

Evidence for cache surveillance by a scatter-hoarding rodent

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 85(6), 1511–1516.

By: B. Hirsch*, R. Kays n & P. Jansen*

author keywords: Astrocaryum; BCI; Dasyprocta; long-term memory; reinforcement; secondary dispersal; seed dispersal
TL;DR: It is concluded that agoutis remember the location of cached seeds, are aware of their ownership and actively survey their caches, and this behaviour could have important fitness benefits and may be exhibited by other scatter-hoarding animals. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2013 journal article

Flying with the wind: scale dependency of speed and direction measurements in modelling wind support in avian flight

Movement Ecology, 1(1).

By: K. Safi*, B. Kranstauber*, R. Weinzierl, L. Griffin*, E. Rees*, D. Cabot, S. Cruz*, C. Proaño* ...

author keywords: NOAA; ECMWF; GPS; Aves; Doppler-shift; Scaling; Measurement error; Flight direction; Flight speed
TL;DR: Wind has strong effects on bird flight, and combining GPS technology with path annotation of weather variables allows us to quantify these effects for understanding flight behaviour, and the potentially strong influence of scaling effects must be considered and implemented in developing sampling regimes and data analysis. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
7. Affordable and Clean Energy (OpenAlex)
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
14. Life Below Water (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 24, 2021

2013 journal article

Observing the unwatchable through acceleration logging of animal behavior

Animal Biotelemetry, 1(1), 20.

By: D. Brown*, R. Kays n, M. Wikelski*, R. Wilson* & A. Klimley*

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2013 journal article

Prey refuges as predator hotspots: ocelot (Leopardus pardalis) attraction to agouti (Dasyprocta punctata) dens

Acta Theriologica, 59(2), 257–262.

author keywords: Agouti; Behavior; Movement; Ocelot; Predation; Refuge
TL;DR: The results suggest that predators can be attracted to prey refuges or refuging prey, and that the benefits to prey of staying nearby a refuge would thus be counterbalanced by higher likelihoods of predator encounter. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2013 journal article

Taxonomic revision of the olingos (Bassaricyon), with description of a new species, the Olinguito

ZooKeys, 324(324), 1–83.

By: K. Helgen*, M. Pinto, R. Kays*, L. Helgen, M. Tsuchiya, A. Quinn, D. Wilson, J. Maldonado

author keywords: Andes; Bassaricyon; biogeography; Neotropics; new species; olingo; Olinguito
TL;DR: Surprisingly, this Andean endemic species, which the Olinguito has never been previously described, represents a new species in the order Carnivora and is the smallest living member of the family Procyonidae. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2013 journal article

The environmental-data automated track annotation (Env-DATA) system: linking animal tracks with environmental data

Movement Ecology, 1(1).

By: S. Dodge*, G. Bohrer*, R. Weinzierl*, S. Davidson*, R. Kays*, D. Douglas*, S. Cruz*, J. Han*, D. Brandes*, M. Wikelski*

author keywords: Animal movement; Migration; Movebank; Movement ecology; Remote sensing; Track annotation; Weather
TL;DR: The new Env-DATA system enhances Movebank, an open portal of animal tracking data, by automating access to environmental variables from global remote sensing, weather, and ecosystem products from open web resources. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2013 chapter

Why Do Sloths Poop on the Ground?

In Treetops at Risk (pp. 195–199).

By: B. Voirin*, R. Kays n, M. Wikelski n & M. Lowman n

TL;DR: The bizarre ground-based defecation behavior of two- and three-toed sloths remains one of the most paradoxical and humorous mysteries in canopy biology. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2012 journal article

A dynamic Brownian bridge movement model to estimate utilization distributions for heterogeneous animal movement

Journal of Animal Ecology, 81(4), 738–746.

author keywords: behavioural change; encounter probability; GPS; home range; utilization distribution
MeSH headings : Africa, Eastern; Animal Migration; Animals; Charadriiformes / physiology; Ecology / methods; Ethology / methods; Finland; Likelihood Functions; Models, Biological; Mustelidae / physiology; New York; Stochastic Processes
TL;DR: This novel extension of the Brownian bridge movement model, outperforms the current BBMM as indicated by simulations and examples of a territorial mammal and a migratory bird and provides a useful one-dimensional measure of behavioural change along animal tracks. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2012 journal article

A record of Striped Hog-nosed Skunk Conepatus semistriatus in central Panama, between two known sub-ranges

Small Carnivore Conservation, 47, 62–64.

By: H. Esser, Y. Liefting, R. Kays & P. Jansen

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 7, 2021

2012 journal article

A telemetric thread tag for tracking seed dispersal by scatter-hoarding rodents

Plant Ecology, 213(6), 933–943.

By: B. Hirsch*, R. Kays* & P. Jansen*

author keywords: Radio telemetry; Seed tag; Animal dispersed seeds; Astrocaryum; Agouti
TL;DR: It is concluded that telemetric thread tags can be used to document secondary seed dispersal by scatter-hoarding animals with unprecedented efficacy and precision. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 24, 2021

2012 journal article

Accelerometer-informed GPS telemetry: Reducing the trade-off between resolution and longevity

Wildlife Society Bulletin, 36(1), 139–146.

By: D. Brown*, S. LaPoint*, R. Kays*, W. Heidrich, F. Kümmeth & M. Wikelski*

author keywords: accelerometry; activity; animal movement; anteater; fisher; fix success; Global Positioning System performance; location success; wildlife tracking
TL;DR: A dynamic GPS schedule that is linked to the activity level of the animal via an accelerometer onboard the tracking tag, and accelerometer-informed GPS tags reduce the trade-off between collecting detailed movement data and recording movement data for a longer period of time. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2012 chapter

Analysis of radiotelemetry data

In The Wildlife Techniques Manual: Volume 1 Research (pp. 480–501). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

By: J. Millspaugh, R. Gitzen, J. Belant, R. Kays, B. Keller, D. Kesler, C. Rota, J. Schulz, C. Bodinof

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

2012 journal article

Animal Visitation and Pollination of Flowering Balsa Trees (Ochroma pyramidale) in Panama

Mesoamericana, 16(3), 56–70.

By: R. Kays, M. Rodríguez, L. Valencia, R. Horan, R. Adam & C. Ziegler

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 7, 2021

2012 journal article

Bias in estimating animal travel distance: the effect of sampling frequency

Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 3(4), 653–662.

author keywords: Barro Colorado Island; camera traps; daily distance; day range; movement models; radiotracking; random walk; telemetry; travel distance; tropical forest
TL;DR: Simulation of movement paths parameterized with empirical movement data is used to study how estimates of distance travelled are affected by sampling frequency. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2012 journal article

Data from: Thieving rodents as substitute dispersers of megafaunal seeds

By: P. Jansen, B. Hirsch, W. Emsens, V. Zamora-Gutierrez, M. Wikelski & R. Kays*

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2012 journal article

Directed seed dispersal towards areas with low conspecific tree density by a scatter-hoarding rodent

Ecology Letters, 15(12), 1423–1429.

By: B. Hirsch*, R. Kays n, V. Pereira* & P. Jansen*

Ed(s): M. Rejmanek

author keywords: Astrocaryum; agouti; Barro Colorado Island; directed dispersal; density dependence; Dasyprocta punctata; secondary seed dispersal
MeSH headings : Animals; Ecosystem; Feeding Behavior / physiology; Population Density; Rodentia / physiology; Seed Dispersal / physiology; Trees / physiology
TL;DR: Agoutis carried seeds towards locations with lower conspecific tree densities, thus facilitating the escape of seeds from natural enemies, and this behaviour may be a widespread mechanism leading to highly effective seed dispersal by scatter-hoarding animals. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2012 journal article

Effects of Food Availability on Space and Refuge Use by a Neotropical Scatterhoarding Rodent

Biotropica, 45(1), 88–93.

By: W. Emsens*, L. Suselbeek*, B. Hirsch*, R. Kays*, A. Winkelhagen* & P. Jansen*

author keywords: Astrocaryum standleyanum; Central American agouti; Dasyprocta punctata; food limitation; home range; Panama; predation risk; radio telemetry
TL;DR: It is found that agoutis living in areas of lower food density had larger home ranges, and that all individuals used multiple refuges, and the number of refugees was not correlated with home range size. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2012 journal article

Moderating Argos location errors in animal tracking data

Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 3(6), 999–1007.

By: D. Douglas*, R. Weinzierl, S. C. Davidson*, R. Kays n, M. Wikelski* & G. Bohrer*

Ed(s): L. Giuggioli

author keywords: accuracy; animal movement; Argos; Douglas Argos-filter; Movebank; satellite telemetry
TL;DR: Douglas Argos-filter can improve data accuracy by 50–90% and is an effective and flexible tool for preparing Argos data for direct biological interpretation or subsequent modelling. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2012 journal article

Thieving rodents as substitute dispersers of megafaunal seeds

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 109(31), 12610–12615.

author keywords: Pleistocene extinctions; seed predation; cache pilferage; telemetry
MeSH headings : Animals; Central America; Ecosystem; Rodentia / physiology; Seeds; Soil; Trees / physiology
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that communities of rodents can in fact provide highly effective long-distance seed dispersal, suggesting that thieving scatter-hoarding rodents could substitute for extinct megafaunal seed dispersers of tropical large-seeded trees. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2012 chapter

Wildlife radiotelemetry and remote monitoring

In The Wildlife Techniques Manual: Volume 1 Research (pp. 258–283). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

By: J. Millspaugh, D. Kesler, R. Gitzen, R. Kays, J. Schulz, C. Rota, C. Bodinof, J. Belant, B. Keller

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

2012 chapter

Wildlife radiotracking

In K. Sivakumar & B. Habib (Eds.), ENVIS Bulletin on Telemetry in Wildlife Science (Vol. 13, pp. 20–30).

By: J. Millspaugh, D. Kesler, R. Kays, R. Gitzen, J. Schulz, J. Belant, C. Rota, B. Keller, C. Bodinof

Ed(s): K. Sivakumar & B. Habib

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 7, 2021

2012 journal article

Ámbito de Hogar y Actividad Circadiana del Ocelote (Leopardus pardalis) en la Isla de Barro Colorado, Panamá

Mesoamericana, 16(3), 30–39.

By: R. Moreno, R. Kays, J. Giacalone-Willis, E. Aliaga-Rossel, R. Mares & A. Bustamante

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 7, 2021

2011 journal article

A genome-wide perspective on the evolutionary history of enigmatic wolf-like canids

GENOME RESEARCH, 21(8), 1294–1305.

By: B. vonHoldt*, J. Pollinger*, D. Earl*, J. Knowles*, A. Boyko*, H. Parker*, E. Geffen*, M. Pilot* ...

MeSH headings : Animals; Biological Evolution; Canidae / genetics; Coyotes / genetics; Dogs / genetics; Evolution, Molecular; Genome; Genotype; Haplotypes; Hybridization, Genetic; Phenotype; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Wolves / genetics
TL;DR: It is found that these enigmatic canids are highly admixed varieties derived from gray wolves and coyotes, respectively, and divergent genomic history suggests that they do not have a shared recent ancestry as proposed by previous researchers. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 review

Causes of mortality in North American populations of large and medium-sized mammals

[Review of ]. ANIMAL CONSERVATION, 14(5), 474–483.

By: C. Collins* & R. Kays*

author keywords: cause-specific mortality; human-footprint; anthropogenic; hunting; predation; vehicle collision; mammals
TL;DR: It is suggested that humans cause most mortalities observed in larger mammals in North America, suggesting that anthropogenic mortalities may represent strong selective forces for animal populations and offer mechanistic support for rapid evolutionary shifts in behavior and morphology in response to human caused changes to the landscape. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
3. Good Health and Well-being (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 journal article

Emergence Time and Foraging Activity in Pallas' Mastiff Bat,Molossus molossus(Chiroptera: Molossidae) in Relation to Sunset/Sunrise and Phase of the Moon

Acta Chiropterologica, 13(2), 399–404.

By: R. Holland*, C. Meyer*, E. Kalko*, R. Kays* & M. Wikelski*

author keywords: Molossus molossus; emergence; foraging; nocturnal; predator pressure; activity
TL;DR: The velvety free-tailed bat Molossus molossus emerges just after sunset and just before sunrise for very short foraging bouts (average 82.2 min foraging per night) and this data suggests that M. molossus represents an example of an aerial hawking bat whose foraging behaviour is in fact adapted to the compromise between the need to exploit highest prey availability and theneed to avoid predation. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2011 journal article

Flower power

BBC Wildlife Magazine, May.

By: R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 dataset

Mammals of North America

By: R. Kays & D. Wilson

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 journal article

Mining periodic behaviors of object movements for animal and biological sustainability studies

Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery, 24(2), 355–386.

By: Z. Li*, J. Han*, B. Ding* & R. Kays*

author keywords: Data mining; Object movements; Periodicity; Pattern analysis; Animal and environmental studies
TL;DR: A two-stage algorithm, Periodica, is proposed to solve the problem of mining periodic behaviors for moving objects, with the main assumption that the observed movement is generated from multiple interleaved periodic behaviors associated with certain reference locations. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2011 journal article

Monitoring wild animal communities with arrays of motion sensitive camera traps

International Journal of Research and Reviews in Wireless Sensor Networks, 1, 19–29.

By: R. Kays, S. Tilak, B. Kranstauber, P. Jansen, C. Carbone, M. Rowcliffe, T. Fountain, J. Eggert, Z. He

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 journal article

MoveMine

ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology, 2(4), 1–32.

By: Z. Li*, J. Han*, M. Ji*, L. Tang*, Y. Yu*, B. Ding*, J. Lee*, R. Kays*

author keywords: Algorithms; Experimentation; Moving objects; pattern mining; periodic behavior; swarm pattern; computational sustainability
TL;DR: A moving object data mining system, MoveMine, which integrates multiple data mining functions, including sophisticated pattern mining and trajectory analysis is introduced, which will benefit scientists and other users to carry out versatile analysis tasks to analyze object movement regularities and anomalies. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2011 journal article

Quantifying seed dispersal kernels from truncated seed-tracking data

Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 3(3), 595–602.

author keywords: censored tail reconstruction; censored tail reconstruction; kernel; long-distance dispersal; seed dispersal; seed tracking; thread tag
TL;DR: Seed dispersal is a key biological process that remains poorly documented because dispersing seeds are notoriously hard to track, and seed‐tracking studies typically yield incomplete data sets that are biased against long‐distance movements. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2011 journal article

Quantifying the sensitivity of camera traps: an adapted distance sampling approach

METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2(5), 464–476.

By: J. Rowcliffe, C. Carbone, P. Jansen, R. Kays* & B. Kranstauber

author keywords: abundance estimation; animal density; camera detection zone; detection probability; passive infrared motion sensor; Random Encounter Model
TL;DR: The random encounter model (REM) provides a means estimating abundance from camera trap rate but requires camera sensitivity to be quantified. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 journal article

Technology on the Move: Recent and Forthcoming Innovations for Tracking Migratory Birds

BioScience, 61(9), 689–698.

By: E. Bridge*, K. Thorup*, M. Bowlin*, P. Chilson*, R. Diehl*, R. Fléron, P. Hartl, R. Kays* ...

author keywords: tracking technology; geolocators; cellular tracking; satellite transmitter; radar ornithology
TL;DR: Improvements to traditional technologies, along with innovations related to global positioning systems, cellular networks, solar geolocation, radar, and information technology are improving the understanding of when and where birds go during their annual cycles and informing numerous scientific disciplines, including evolutionary biology, population ecology, and global change. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 journal article

The Movebank data model for animal tracking

Environmental Modelling & Software, 26(6), 834–835.

By: B. Kranstauber*, A. Cameron*, R. Weinzerl*, T. Fountain*, S. Tilak*, M. Wikelski*, R. Kays*

author keywords: Animal movement; Data model; GPS; Argos; VHF Telemetry; Tracking
TL;DR: An animal movement data model is presented that is used within the Movebank web application to describe tracked animals and facilitates data comparisons across a broad range of taxa, study designs, and technologies. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 journal article

The effect of feeding time on dispersal of Virola seeds by toucans determined from GPS tracking and accelerometers

Acta Oecologica, 37(6), 625–631.

By: R. Kays*, P. Jansen*, E. Knecht*, R. Vohwinkel & M. Wikelski*

author keywords: Seed dispersal kernel; Regurgitation time; GPS tracking; Accelerometer; Tropical forests
TL;DR: This study combined high-resolution GPS/3D-acceleration bird tracking, seed-retention experiments, and field observations to quantify dispersal of V. nobilis by their principal dispersers, Ramphastos toucans, demonstrating how new tracking technology can yield nuanced seed dispersal kernels for animals that cannot be directly observed. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 journal article

Tracking Animal Location and Activity with an Automated Radio Telemetry System in a Tropical Rainforest

COMPUTER JOURNAL, 54(12), 1931–1948.

By: R. Kays*, S. Tilak*, M. Crofoot*, T. Fountain*, D. Obando*, A. Ortega*, F. Kuemmeth, J. Mandel* ...

author keywords: sensor networks; animal tracking; environmental observing systems
TL;DR: An Automated Radio-Telemetry System (ARTS) that is designed and built on Barro Colorado Island, Panama and used to track 374 individual animals from 38 species, including 17 mammal species, 12 birds, 7 reptiles or amphibians, as well as two species of plant seeds is described. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 journal article

Using stable carbon isotopes to distinguish wild from captive wolves

Northeast Naturalist, 18, 253–264.

By: R. Kays* & R. Feranec*

TL;DR: This new evidence suggests that, while some Wolves are escaping from captivity, at least three animals have apparently dispersed into the area, adding new urgency to the preparation of conservation plans for the potential natural recovery of this endangered species in the region. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: NC State University Libraries, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

2010 journal article

Does watching a monkey change its behaviour? Quantifying observer effects in habituated wild primates using automated radiotelemetry

Animal Behaviour, 80(3), 475–480.

By: M. Crofoot*, T. Lambert*, R. Kays* & M. Wikelski*

author keywords: Barro Colorado Island, Panama; Cebus capucinus; habituation; telemetry
TL;DR: Data from an automated radiotelemetry system that remotely monitored the movement and activity of radiocollared animals is used to test whether observers affected the behaviour of seven habituated white-faced capuchins, finding no evidence that observers influenced the ranging behaviour or activity patterns of their study subjects. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2010 journal article

Large-Range Movements of Neotropical Orchid Bees Observed via Radio Telemetry

PLoS ONE, 5(5), e10738.

By: M. Wikelski*, J. Moxley*, A. Eaton-Mordas*, M. López-Uribe*, R. Holland*, D. Moskowitz, D. Roubik*, R. Kays*

Ed(s): N. Raine

MeSH headings : Animals; Bees / physiology; Ecosystem; Flight, Animal / physiology; Geography; Male; Movement / physiology; Orchidaceae; Radio; Telemetry / methods; Tropical Climate
TL;DR: The results indicate that individual male orchid bees habitually use large rainforest areas on a daily basis, and suggest a higher degree of site fidelity than what may be expected in a free living male bee, and has implications for the understanding of biological activity patterns and the evolution of forest pollinators. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2010 conference paper

Mining periodic behaviors for moving objects

Proceedings of the 16th ACM SIGKDD international conference on Knowledge discovery and data mining - KDD '10. Presented at the the 16th ACM SIGKDD international conference.

By: Z. Li*, B. Ding*, J. Han*, R. Kays* & P. Nye*

Event: the 16th ACM SIGKDD international conference

TL;DR: A two-stage algorithm, Periodica, is proposed to solve the problem of mining periodic behaviors for moving objects, and it is proposed that the observed movement is generated from multiple interleaved periodic behaviors associated with certain reference locations. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2010 conference paper

MoveMine: mining moving object databases

Proceedings of the 2010 international conference on Management of data - SIGMOD '10. Presented at the the 2010 international conference.

By: Z. Li*, M. Ji*, J. Lee*, L. Tang*, Y. Yu*, J. Han*, R. Kays*

Event: the 2010 international conference

TL;DR: The system, MoveMine, is designed for sophisticated moving object data mining by integrating several attractive functions including moving object pattern mining and trajectory mining and a user-friendly interface is provided to facilitate interactive exploration of mining results and flexible tuning of the underlying methods. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2010 report

Movebank: archive, analysis and sharing of animal movement data. World Wide Web electronic publication

http://www.movebank.org.

By: M. Wikelski & R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: September 15, 2022

2010 journal article

Reply to Wheeldon et al. ‘Colonization history and ancestry of northeastern coyotes’

Reply to Wheeldon et al. ‘Colonization history and ancestry of northeastern coyotes.’ Biology Letters, 6(2), 248–249.

By: R. Kays*, A. Curtis* & J. Kirchman*

TL;DR: The history of hybridization and range change of Canis in eastern North America has created an interesting evolutionary story that researchers are still untangling. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2010 journal article

Swarm

Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment, 3(1-2), 723–734.

By: Z. Li*, B. Ding*, J. Han* & R. Kays*

TL;DR: In ObjectGrowth, two effective pruning strategies are proposed to greatly reduce the search space and a novel closure checking rule is developed to report closed swarms on-the-fly. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
10. Reduced Inequalities (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2009 conference paper

Camera traps as sensor networks for monitoring animal communities

2009 IEEE 34th Conference on Local Computer Networks. Presented at the 2009 IEEE 34th Conference on Local Computer Networks (LCN 2009).

By: R. Kays*, B. Kranstauber*, P. Jansen*, C. Carbone*, M. Rowcliffe*, T. Fountain*, S. Tilak*

Event: 2009 IEEE 34th Conference on Local Computer Networks (LCN 2009)

TL;DR: It is suggested that the continued development of these hardware, software, and analytical tools, in concert, offer an exciting sensor-network solution to monitoring of animal populations which could realistically scale over larger areas and time spans. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2009 journal article

Evidence for Three-Toed Sloth (Bradypus variegatus) Predation by Spectacled Owl (Pulsatrix perspicillata)

Edentata, 8-10, 15–20.

By: J. Voirin, R. Kays*, M. Lowman & M. Wikelski

TL;DR: This is the first record of P. perspicillata killing such a large prey, highlighting the importance of crypsis, and not self-defense, as sloths' anti-predator strategy, and there are high risks for sloths climbing to the ground to defecate, a puzzling behavior with no clear evolutionary advantage discovered yet. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2009 chapter

Family Procyonidae (Raccoons)

In D. Wilson, R. Mittermeier, & T. E. Lacher (Eds.), Handbook of Mammals of the World (Lynx Editions, Vol. 1, pp. 498–530). Barcelona: Conservation International.

By: R. Kays

Ed(s): D. Wilson, R. Mittermeier & T. Lacher

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 9, 2021

2009 chapter

Fish and wildlife communities of the Adirondacks

In W. Porter, J. Erickson, & R. Whaley (Eds.), The Great Experiment in Conservation: Voices From the Adirondack Park (pp. 71–86). Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press.

By: R. Kays & R. Daniels

Ed(s): W. Porter, J. Erickson & R. Whaley

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 9, 2021

2009 monograph

Mammals of North America

By: R. Kays* & D. Wilson

TL;DR: This book presents a meta-anatomy of the woolly mammoth and some of the mechanisms that aid in the identification and characterization of these animals. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Source: Crossref
Added: September 15, 2020

2009 journal article

Nocturnal activity by the primarily diurnal Central American agouti (Dasyprocta punctata) in relation to environmental conditions, resource abundance and predation risk

Journal of Tropical Ecology, 25(2), 211–215.

By: T. Lambert*, R. Kays*, P. Jansen*, E. Aliaga-Rossel* & M. Wikelski*

author keywords: activity patterns; BCI; Panama; radio-telemetry; risk behaviour
TL;DR: An animal's fitness is in part based on its ability to manage the inherent risks with the benefits of activity, and understanding an animal's pattern of activity is key to understanding behavioural and ecological processes. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2009 journal article

Rapid adaptive evolution of northeastern coyotes via hybridization with wolves

Biology Letters, 6(1), 89–93.

By: R. Kays*, A. Curtis* & J. Kirchman*

author keywords: hybridization; adaptive introgression; range expansion; genetic variation; morphological variation
MeSH headings : Adaptation, Biological / genetics; Analysis of Variance; Animals; Base Sequence; Biological Evolution; Body Weights and Measures; Coyotes / anatomy & histology; Coyotes / genetics; DNA Primers / genetics; DNA, Mitochondrial / genetics; Genetic Variation; Genetics, Population; Haplotypes / genetics; Hybridization, Genetic; Likelihood Functions; Models, Genetic; Molecular Sequence Data; North America; Phylogeny; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Skull / anatomy & histology; Wolves / anatomy & histology; Wolves / genetics
TL;DR: It is suggested that hybridization with wolves in Canada introduced adaptive variation that contributed to larger size, which in turn allowed eastern coyotes to better hunt deer, allowing a more rapid colonization of new areas than coyotes without introgressed wolf genes. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2009 journal article

Scatter hoarding by the Central American agouti: a test of optimal cache spacing theory

Animal Behaviour, 78(6), 1327–1333.

author keywords: cache pilferage; camera trapping; Central American agouti; Dasyprocta punctata; food availability; optimal cache spacing; scatter hoarding; seed dispersal; tropical forest
TL;DR: This work quantified cache pilferage and cache spacing by the Central American agouti in the tropical forest of Barro Colorado Island, Panama, across 10 1 ha plots and concluded that the optimal cache density depends not only on the nutritional value of food but also on the economic value, which may vary in space as well as time. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
2. Zero Hunger (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2009 journal article

Taxonomic boundaries and geographic distributions revealed by an integrative systematic overview of the mountain coatis, Nasuella (Carnivora: Procyonidae)

Small Carnivore Conservation, 41, 65–74.

By: K. Helgen, R. Kays, L. Helgen, M. Tsuchiya-Jerep, C. Pinto, K. Koepfli, E. Eizirik, J. Maldonado

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 9, 2021

2008 journal article

Home-range use by the Central American agouti (Dasyprocta punctata) on Barro Colorado Island, Panama

Journal of Tropical Ecology, 24(4), 367–374.

author keywords: agouti; Dasyprocta punctata; habitat use; home range; mammal density; predation risk; space use
TL;DR: These movement data help to understand the potential impacts of agoutis as seed dispersers, predicting that D. punctata will encounter and hoard fallen fruit within 10–200 m (i.e. radius of home range) of its source, and move seeds towards refuges such as ground holes and dense vegetation around recent tree falls. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2008 journal article

Interaction location outweighs the competitive advantage of numerical superiority in Cebus capucinus intergroup contests

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 105(2), 577–581.

author keywords: between-group competition; intergroup dominance; payoff asymmetries; resource holding potential
MeSH headings : Aggression; Animals; Automation; Behavior, Animal; Cebus / physiology; Cebus / psychology; Competitive Behavior; Game Theory; Models, Theoretical; Panama; Radio Waves; Social Behavior; Social Dominance; Telemetry; Territoriality
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that contest outcome depends on an interaction between group size and location, such that small groups can defeat much larger groups near the center of their home range. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2008 journal article

LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY OF EASTERN COYOTES BASED ON LARGE-SCALE ESTIMATES OF ABUNDANCE

Ecological Applications, 18(4), 1014–1027.

By: R. Kays*, M. Gompper* & J. Ray*

author keywords: abundance; Adirondack State Park; New York; Canis latrans; eastern coyote; fecal DNA; landscape ecology; noninvasive survey
MeSH headings : Animals; Coyotes; Ecosystem; Models, Biological; New York; Population Density
TL;DR: Habitat models predicting coyote abundance using multi-scale vegetation and landscape data and an information-theoretic model selection approach reject the hypothesis that eastern forests are unsuitable habitat for coyotes and support the need for a nuanced view of how eastern coyotes use forested habitats. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2008 journal article

Ocelots on Barro Colorado Island Are Infected with Feline Immunodeficiency Virus but Not Other Common Feline and Canine Viruses

Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 44(3), 760–765.

By: S. Franklin, R. Kays*, R. Moreno, J. TerWee, J. Troyer & S. VandeWoude

author keywords: Barro Colorado Island; FIV; Leopardus; ocelot; serology
MeSH headings : Animals; Animals, Domestic / virology; Animals, Wild / virology; Antibodies, Viral / blood; Conservation of Natural Resources; Felidae / virology; Female; Immunodeficiency Virus, Feline / immunology; Lentivirus Infections / epidemiology; Lentivirus Infections / transmission; Lentivirus Infections / veterinary; Male; Panama / epidemiology; Seroepidemiologic Studies; Species Specificity
TL;DR: It is hypothesized that isolation of this population has prevented introduction of pathogens typically attributed to contact with domestic animals, and the high density of ocelots on Barro Colorado Island may contribute to a high prevalence of FIV infection, as would be expected with increased contact rates among conspecifics in a geographically restricted population. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2008 journal article

Predispersal home range shift of an ocelot Leopardus pardalis (Carnivora: Felidae) on Barro Colorado Island, Panama

Revista De Biología Tropical, 56(2).

By: R. Mares*, R. Moreno*, R. Kays* & M. Wikelski*

MeSH headings : Animal Migration / physiology; Animals; Felidae / classification; Felidae / physiology; Female; Male; Panama; Sexual Behavior, Animal / physiology; Sexual Maturation / physiology; Social Behavior; Telemetry
TL;DR: The timing of the shift, along with the subadult's increase in weight into the weight range of adult ocelots four months after establishing the new territory, suggests that predispersal home range shifts could act as a low risk and opportunistic strategy for reaching adult size, while minimizing competition with parents and siblings, in preparation for an eventual dispersal into a new breeding territory. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2008 chapter

Remote Cameras as a Tool for Broadscale Wildlife Surveys

In G. Marshall (Ed.), Proceedings of the 2007 Animal-Borne Imaging Symposium (pp. 179–182). Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society.

By: R. Kays

Ed(s): G. Marshall

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 9, 2021

2008 chapter

Remote cameras

In R. A. Long, P. MacKay, J. C. Ray, & W. J. Zielinski (Eds.), Noninvasive Survey Methods for Carnivores (pp. 110–140). Washington, D.C.: Island Press.

By: R. Kays & K. Slauson

Ed(s): R. Long, P. MacKay, J. Ray & W. Zielinski

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 9, 2021

2008 journal article

Sleeping outside the box: electroencephalographic measures of sleep in sloths inhabiting a rainforest

Biology Letters, 4(4), 402–405.

By: N. Rattenborg*, B. Voirin*, A. Vyssotski*, R. Kays*, K. Spoelstra*, F. Kuemmeth, W. Heidrich, M. Wikelski*

author keywords: non-rapid eye movement sleep; rapid eye movement sleep; sloth; electroencephalogram; captivity
MeSH headings : Animals; Behavior, Animal / physiology; Electroencephalography; Female; Panama; Sleep / physiology; Sleep, REM / physiology; Sloths / physiology; Tropical Climate
TL;DR: The first electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings of sleep on unrestricted animals in the wild using a recently developed miniaturized EEG recorder are performed, and it is found that brown-throated three-toed sloths inhabiting the canopy of a tropical rainforest only sleep 9.63 h d−1, over 6 H less than previously reported in captivity. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2007 journal article

Going wild: what a global small-animal tracking system could do for experimental biologists

Journal of Experimental Biology, 210(2), 181–186.

By: M. Wikelski*, R. Kays*, N. Kasdin*, K. Thorup*, J. Smith* & G. Swenson*

author keywords: small animal; ICARUS initiative; migration pattern; migratory bird orientation; satellite; field experiments; tracking technology; telemetry; songbird; bat; insect
MeSH headings : Animal Migration; Animals; Geographic Information Systems; Research Design; Spacecraft; Telemetry
TL;DR: It is suggested that the relatively modest investment into a global small-animal tracking system will pay off by providing unprecedented insights into both basic and applied nature, and to contribute to an emerging groundswell of scientific support to make such a new technological system happen. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2007 journal article

Using Patterns in Track-Plate Footprints to Identify Individual Fishers

Journal of Wildlife Management, 71(3), 955–963.

By: C. Herzog*, R. Kays*, J. Ray*, M. Gompper*, W. Zielinski*, R. Higgins, M. Tymeson

author keywords: census; fingerprint; fisher; footprint; identification; Martes pennanti; track plate
TL;DR: Data from traditional track-plate deployments over small time periods cannot be used as a measure of abundance, but new study designs using print matching could obtain robust noninvasive, mark–recapture density estimates. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2007 journal article

Variability in assays used for detection of lentiviral infection in bobcats (Lynx rufus), pumas (Puma concolor), and ocelots (Leopardus pardalis)

Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 43(4), 700–710.

By: S. Franklin*, J. Troyer*, J. TerWee*, L. Lyren*, R. Kays*, S. Riley*, W. Boyce*, K. Crooks*, S. Vandewoude*

author keywords: bobcat; ELISA; FIV; immunoblot; lentivirus; ocelot; PCR; puma
MeSH headings : Animals; Animals, Wild / virology; Diagnosis, Differential; Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay / methods; Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay / veterinary; Felidae / virology; Female; Immunoblotting / methods; Immunoblotting / veterinary; Lentivirus / immunology; Lentivirus / isolation & purification; Lentivirus Infections / diagnosis; Lentivirus Infections / veterinary; Lynx / virology; Male; Polymerase Chain Reaction / methods; Polymerase Chain Reaction / veterinary; Puma / virology; Species Specificity
TL;DR: The results from this study and previous investigations suggest that the PLV immunoblot has the greatest ability to detect reactive samples when screening wild felids of North America and is unlikely to produce false positive results. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2006 journal article

A Comparison of Noninvasive Techniques to Survey Carnivore Communities in Northeastern North America

Wildlife Society Bulletin, 34(4), 1142–1151.

By: M. Gompper*, R. Kays*, J. Ray*, S. Lapoint*, D. Bogan* & J. Cryan*

author keywords: camera traps; camivores; fecal DNA; latency to detection; New York; noninvasive survey; probability of detection; snowtracking; track-plates
TL;DR: It is recommended that survey efforts targeting multiple members of the carnivore community use multiple independent techniques and incorporate mechanisms to truth their relative value, as well as investigating differences in the value of techniques in detecting different species. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2006 journal article

COMPETITIVE RELEASE IN DIETS OF OCELOT (LEOPARDUS PARDALIS) AND PUMA (PUMA CONCOLOR) AFTER JAGUAR (PANTHERA ONCA) DECLINE

Journal of Mammalogy, 87(4), 808–816.

By: R. Moreno*, R. Kays* & R. Samudio*

author keywords: Barro Colorado Island; Carnivora; competitive release; diet; felid; predation
TL;DR: Both populations of ocelots in the study ate larger prey than elsewhere in their range, suggesting that their fundamental niche includes more medium-sized prey than their realized niche in other sites. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2006 journal article

DEVELOPMENTAL EFFECTS OF CLIMATE ON THE LION'S MANE (PANTHERA LEO)

Journal of Mammalogy, 87(2), 193–200.

By: B. Patterson*, R. Kays*, S. Kasiki* & V. Sebestyen*

author keywords: developmental effects; lion; mane; Panthera leo; phenotypic plasticity; sexual selection; temperature
TL;DR: Study of captive lions housed comparably across 12 degrees of latitude in North America correlated mane variation with climatic, life-history, and husbandry variables and found mane length and density were inversely correlated with temperature; color variation was unrelated. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2006 journal article

Ocelot (Leopardus pardalis) Predation on Agouti (Dasyprocta punctata)

Biotropica, 38(5), 691–694.

By: E. Aliaga-Rossel, R. Moreno*, R. Kays* & J. Giacalone*

author keywords: agouti; Dasyprocta punctata; Leopardus pardalis; Neotropics; ocelot; Panama; predation
TL;DR: PPredation by ocelots can be a significant cause of mortality for agoutis at Barro Colorado Island (BCI). (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2005 chapter

Exotic Species

In P. Eisenstadt & L. E. Moss (Eds.), Encylopedia of New York (pp. 538–539). Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press.

By: R. Kays, R. Daniels, R. Mitchell, D. Molloy & C. Siegfried

Ed(s): P. Eisenstadt & L. Moss

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 20, 2021

2005 journal article

Molecular genetic variation across the southern and eastern geographic ranges of the African lion, Panthera leo

Conservation Genetics, 6(1), 15–24.

By: J. Dubach*, B. Patterson*, M. Briggs*, K. Venzke*, J. Flamand*, P. Stander*, L. Scheepers*, R. Kays*

author keywords: African lion; cytochrome b; mitochondrial variation; NADH dehydrogenase; Panthera leo; phylogeography
TL;DR: The modest genetic variation documented here argues against taxonomic distinctions among living African lions. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2004 journal article

Ecological impact of inside/outside house cats around a suburban nature preserve

Animal Conservation, 7(3), 273–283.

By: R. Kays* & A. DeWan*

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2004 journal article

Livestock predation by lions (Panthera leo) and other carnivores on ranches neighboring Tsavo National ParkS, Kenya

Biological Conservation, 119(4), 507–516.

By: B. Patterson*, S. Kasiki*, E. Selempo & R. Kays*

author keywords: lion; predator; conflict; cattle; Kenya; seasonality
TL;DR: Intensified predation in the wet season differs from patterns of lion predation elsewhere but reinforces the pattern that large carnivores take more livestock when native prey are most difficult to find and kill. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2003 journal article

A Survey of the Parasites of Coyotes (Canis latrans) in New York based on Fecal Analysis

Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 39(3), 712–717.

By: M. Gompper*, R. Goodman*, R. Kays*, J. Ray*, C. Fiorello* & S. Wade*

author keywords: Canis latrans; coyotes; parasites; New York; survey
MeSH headings : Animals; Carnivora / parasitology; Cestode Infections / epidemiology; Cestode Infections / veterinary; Feces / parasitology; Female; Helminthiasis, Animal / epidemiology; Male; Nematode Infections / epidemiology; Nematode Infections / veterinary; New York / epidemiology; Population Density; Population Dynamics; Protozoan Infections, Animal / epidemiology
TL;DR: Parasite component community diversity was higher than in middle and northern sites and infracommunity species richness was greater in southern New York than at the other sites, which may reflect the variable diets of coyotes, as well as recent colonization of the region and the mixing of component communities from expanding coyote populations. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2003 journal article

Animals crossing the Northway: Are existing culverts useful?

Adirondack Journal of Environmental Studies, 10(1), 11–17.

By: S. LaPoint, R. Kays & J. Ray

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 20, 2021

2003 journal article

Response to Revilla, and Buckley and Ruxton: the resource dispersion hypothesis

Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 18(8), 381–382.

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2003 chapter

Social polyandry and promiscuous mating in a primate-like carnivore: the kinkajou (Potos flavus)

In Monogamy (pp. 125–137).

By: R. Kays*

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2002 journal article

Does the resource dispersion hypothesis explain group living?

Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 17(12), 563–570.

TL;DR: The empirical support of the resource dispersion hypothesis is reviewed, the predictions of the RDH are clarified and it is argued that they can be used to provide better tests. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2002 book review

Kenward, R. 2001. A manual for wildlife radio tagging,2nd edition. New York: Academic Press. 350 pp. ISBN:0 124 04242 2 and Millspaugh, J. and Marzluff, J.2001. Radio tracking and animal populations, New York:Harcourt Publishers. 400 pp. ISBN: 0 124 97781 2 (hacovers). DOI:10.1017/S1367943002212317

[Review of ]. Animal Conservation, 5(3), 259–259.

By: R. Kays*

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2002 chapter

Lion: Panthera leo

In Encylopedia Britannica. Chicago, Illinois: Encyclopedia Britannica.

By: R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 20, 2021

2002 book

Mammals of North America

Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.

By: R. Kays & D. Wilson

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 20, 2021

2002 journal article

Mane variation in African lions and its social correlates

Canadian Journal of Zoology, 80(3), 471–478.

By: R. Kays* & B. Patterson

TL;DR: A popula- tion of lions in Tsavo National Park, Kenya, that is largely maneless is document and aspects of their social organization are described and refuting the "group size - mane size" hypothesis is refuted. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

2002 chapter

The Appalacians

In R. A. Mittermeier, C. G. Mittermeier, P. R. Gil, G. Fonseca, T. Brooks, & W. R. Konstant (Eds.), Wilderness: Earth's last wild place (pp. 458–467). Mexico City, Mexico: Conservation International.

By: J. Pickering, R. Kays, A. Meier, S. Andrew & K. Yatskievych

Ed(s): R. Mittermeier, C. Mittermeier, P. Gil, G. Fonseca, T. Brooks & W. Konstant

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 20, 2021

2001 journal article

Plant Ecology, 153(1/2), 109–120.

By: R. Kays* & A. Allison*

author keywords: amphibians; birds; canopy; mammals; primates; reptiles
TL;DR: The ecology and specialized methods required for studying arboreal mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians are reviewed, and faunal checklists from 12 tropical wet forest sites and an analysis of all articles published during the past ten years in 14 major journals are used to assess current knowledge and general research trends. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Source: Crossref
Added: September 14, 2020

2001 chapter

Arboreal tropical forest vertebrates: current knowledge and research trends

In Tropical Forest Canopies: Ecology and Management (pp. 109–120).

By: R. Kays* & A. Allison*

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2001 journal article

The social organization of the kinkajou Potos flavus (Procyonidae)

Journal of Zoology, 253(4), 491–504.

By: R. Kays* & J. Gittleman*

author keywords: behaviour; carnivores; kinkajou; Potos flavus; primate evolution; social organization
TL;DR: Although the composition of social groups was polyandrous, males also copulated with non-group females which suggests a promiscuous mating system, and female-biased dispersal and patterns of male association seem to be patrilineal and based on resource defence. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

2000 journal article

Microsatellite analysis of kinkajou social organization

Molecular Ecology, 9(6), 743–751.

By: R. Kays*, J. Gittleman* & R. Wayne*

author keywords: Carnivora; dispersal; paternity; patrilineal; Potos; relatedness
MeSH headings : Age Factors; Animals; Behavior, Animal / physiology; Female; Genetics, Population; Heterozygote; Likelihood Functions; Lorisidae / physiology; Male; Microsatellite Repeats
TL;DR: Copulation asymmetry in kinkajou social groups does not necessarily reflect cooperation due to kinship ties between the two adult males within a group as one of two adult male pairs sampled was unrelated. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
10. Reduced Inequalities (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

2000 journal article

The behavior and ecology of olingos (Bassaricyon gabbii) and their competition with kinkajous (Potos flavus) in central Panama

Mammalia, 64(1), 1–10.

By: R. Kays*

Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 14, 2020

1999 journal article

A hoistable arboreal mammal trap

Wildlife Society Bulletin, 27(2), 298–300.

By: R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 27, 2021

1999 journal article

Food Preferences of Kinkajous (Potos flaws): A Frugivorous Carnivore

Journal of Mammalogy, 80(2), 589–599.

By: R. Kays*

author keywords: Potos flavus; kinkajou; frugivore; fruit; arboreal; canopy; diet; Ficus; Panama
TL;DR: Compared with other large mammalian frugivores in central Panama the diet of kinkajous is most similar to the spider monkey ( Ateles geoffroyi ). (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 29, 2021

1999 thesis

The solitary group life of a frugivorous carnivore: ecology, behavior, and genetics of kinkajous (Potos flavus

(Dissertation). University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee.

By: R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 27, 2021

1998 journal article

An observation of a White-throated sparrow (Zonotrichia albicollis) exhibiting partial albinism

The Migrant, 69(3), 130–131.

By: T. Brooks, C. Anderson & R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 27, 2021

1997 journal article

Kirtland's warbler in Tennessee

The Migrant, 68(2), 42–43.

By: C. Skelton & R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 27, 2021

1996 journal article

Comments on the behavior a grison (Galictis vittata) hunting an agouti (Dasyprocta punctata

Small Carnivore Conservation Newsletter, 15(5).

By: R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: September 15, 2022

1996 journal article

Comments on the behaviour of a Grison (Galictis vittata) hunting an Agouti (Dasyprocta punctata)

Small Carnivore Conservation, 15, 5.

By: R. Kays

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 27, 2021

1995 journal article

Home Range Size and Social Behavior of Kinkajous (Potos flavus) in the Republic of Panama

Biotropica, 27(4), 530.

By: R. Kays* & J. Gittleman

author keywords: home range; Panama; Potos flavus; social behavior
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 15, 2020

Employment

Updated: January 31st, 2019 05:28

2012 - present

North Carolina State University Raleigh, NC, US
Forestry and Environmental Research

2012 - present

North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences Raleigh, NC, US

Education

Updated: January 28th, 2021 09:28

1994 - 1999

University of Tennessee Knoxville, TN, US
PhD Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

1989 - 1993

Cornell University Ithaca, NY, US
BS Biology

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