4.5 Article

Accelerometer tags: detecting and identifying activities in fish and the effect of sampling frequency

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 216, Issue 7, Pages 1255-1264

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.077396

Keywords

accelerometer tag; fish; behaviour; activity; feeding; escape; sampling frequency

Categories

Funding

  1. OTN Canada - NSERC Strategic Network Grant [NETGP 375118-08]
  2. Fisheries Society of the British Isles
  3. Friday Harbor Laboratories through the Stephen and Ruth Wainwright Fellowship Endowment
  4. Adopt-a-Student Fund
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [10J06259] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Monitoring and measuring the behaviour and movement of aquatic animals in the wild is typically challenging, though micro-accelerometer (archival or telemetry) tags now provide the means to remotely identify and quantify behavioural states and rates such as resting, swimming and migrating, and to estimate activity and energy budgets. Most studies use low-frequency (<= 32 Hz) accelerometer sampling because of battery and data-archiving constraints. In this study we assessed the effect of sampling frequency (aliasing) on activity detection probability using the great sculpin (Myoxocephalus polyacanthoceaphalus) as a model species. Feeding strikes and escape responses (fast-start activities) and spontaneous movements among seven different great sculpin were triggered, observed and recorded using video records and a tri-axial accelerometer sampling at 100 Hz. We demonstrate that multiple parameters in the time and probability domains can statistically differentiate between activities with high detection (90%) and identification (80%) probabilities. Detection probability for feeding and escape activities decreased by 50% when sampling at <10 Hz. Our analyses illustrate additional problems associated with aliasing and how activity and energy-budget estimates can be compromised and misinterpreted. We recommend that high-frequency (>30 Hz) accelerometer sampling be used in similar laboratory and field studies. If battery and/or data storage is limited, we also recommend archiving the events via an on-board algorithm that determines the highest likelihood and subsequent archiving of the various event classes of interest.

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