4.6 Article

Tracking wildlife energy dynamics with unoccupied aircraft systems and three-dimensional photogrammetry

期刊

METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 12, 期 12, 页码 2458-2472

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210X.13719

关键词

body volume; drone; grey seal; mass; morphometrics; photogrammetry; pinniped; structure-from-motion

类别

资金

  1. Canada Department of Fisheries and Oceans
  2. Oak Foundation
  3. WHOI Innovative Research and Development Program
  4. National Geographic Society [64226R-19]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

A novel application using drones for structure-from-motion 3-D photogrammetry of multiple free-living animals is presented, validating the use of UAS as a non-invasive tool for tracking energy dynamics in wild populations. The method accurately measures animal volume and mass, and is highly practical for studying a large number of animals in the wild.
We present a novel application using unoccupied aircraft systems (UAS; drones) for structure-from-motion three-dimensional (3-D) photogrammetry of multiple, free-living animals simultaneously. Pinnipeds reliably haul out on shore for pupping and breeding each year, accompanied by dramatic female-to-pup mass transfer over a short lactation period and males lose mass while defending mating territories. This provides a tractable study system for validating the use of UAS as a non-invasive tool for tracking energy dynamics in wild populations. UAS imagery of grey seals Halichoerus grypus was collected at Saddle Island, Nova Scotia. A multirotor UAS was piloted in 360-degree orbits around relatively dense animal aggregations and georeferenced images were used for construction of a 3-D point cloud, orthomosaic and Digital Surface Model for animal volumetric measurements. Directly following UAS survey, a subset of adult females were hand-measured (morphometrics, blubber depth, n = 21 handlings [15 were unique animals]) and female-pup pairs were weighed (adult females: n = 32 [24]; pups: n = 33 [23]) to validate that UAS 3-D photogrammetric models provided accurate animal volume and mass estimates. UAS two-dimensional body length measurements were sensitive to animal recumbency and posture. The new UAS 3-D photogrammetric method overcame these constraints, and aerial-derived body volume measurements were equivalent to those collected from the ground. UAS body volume measurements precisely predicted 'true' body mass (mean absolute error, adult female: 3.8 kg, 2.1% body mass; pup: 4.1 kg, 9.8%), and exhibited a stronger relationship with total body mass than with blubber volume. The method was applied to 673 free-living animals to characterize volume and mass dynamics across lactation and breeding for a much larger sample size than would be possible using traditional ground methods. Indeed, 1-46 animals (M +/- SE: 9.2 +/- 1.2) were modelled concurrently within the focal area of a UAS flight. Application of the method also captured significant inter-annual variation in body volume/mass dynamics, and female-to-pup energy transfer efficiencies were lower when there was low sea ice extent. The UAS 3-D photogrammetric method presented in this study is likely to be broadly applicable to other species, and the ability to measure whole groups of free-living animals at once makes strides towards 'weighing populations'.

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