6EV314 Population monitoring using radiotracking

    • Number of credits
      2,5
    • Teaching semester
      2024 Spring
    • Language of instruction
      English
    • Campus
      Evenstad
    • Required prerequisite knowledge

      None

Course content

Radiotracking techniques and applications, design of radiotelemetry studies, laws and permits needed, animal welfare, radiotelemetry in practice, triangulation, GPS use and GPS measurement errors, storage and management of spatial data in databases, organisation and visualization of radiotelemetry data in Excel, basic movement analyses.

Learning Outcome

A student with fulfilled qualifications will have the following learning outcome:

Knowledge

Student

  • has thorough knowledge of the application, possibilities and limitations of the most commonly used radiotags and biosensors in wildlife research
  • is acquainted with the procedures and permissons used to apply radiotags to wildlife
  • knows the most important geographic projections and coordinate systems
Skills

Student

  • can apply triangulation in the field to track VHF-tags
  • is able to set up and organize databases to store location data
  • can organize and analyse radiotracking and GPS-data using database and statistics programs
General competence

Student

  • is aware of the animal welfare law applied to wildlife monitored with radiotags
  • has an in-depth insight into different tracking methods and the advantages and disadvantages of these methods
  • has some basic understanding of spatial data and their applications in applied ecology
Teaching and working methods

Lectures, field tests, seminars

Required coursework

Oral presentation

Form of assessment

Written scientific report

Assessments
Form of assessmentGrading scaleGroupingDuration of assessmentSupport materialsProportionComment
Written assignment
ECTS - A-F
Individual
Faculty
Faculty of Applied Ecology, Agricultural Sciences and Biotechnology
Department
Department of Forestry and Wildlife Management