Shlomo Cain

Shlomo Cain
  • Master of Science
  • PhD Student at Tel Aviv University

About

12
Publications
2,679
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
68
Citations
Current institution
Tel Aviv University
Current position
  • PhD Student

Publications

Publications (12)
Article
Full-text available
Animal movement plays a key role in many ecological processes and has a direct influence on an individual’s fitness at several scales of analysis (i.e., next-step, subdiel, day-by-day, seasonal). This highlights the need to dissect movement behavior at different spatio-temporal scales and develop hierarchical movement tools for generating realistic...
Preprint
Full-text available
Improved animal tracking technologies provide opportunities for novel segmentation of movement tracks/paths into behavioral activity modes (BAMs) critical to understanding the ecology of individuals and the functioning of ecosystems. Current BAM segmentation includes biological change point analyses and hidden Markov models. Here we use an elementa...
Preprint
Animal movement plays a key role in many ecological processes and has a direct influence on the individual's fitness. Movement tracks can be studied at various spatio-temporal scales, but the movement usually emerges from sequences of fundamental movement elements (FuMEs: e.g., a step or wing flap). The importance of movement in all aspects of the...
Article
Full-text available
Time-of-arrival transmitter localization systems, which use measurements from an array of sensors to estimate the location of a radio or acoustic emitter, are now widely used for tracking wildlife. Outlier measurements can severely corrupt estimated locations. This article describes a new suite of location estimation algorithms for such systems. Th...
Article
Full-text available
Many environmental and ecological studies require line of sight (LOS) and/or viewshed analyses. While tools for performing these analyses from digital elevation models (DEMs) are widespread, they are either too restrictive, inaccessible or pricey and difficult to use. This methodological gap is potentially imperative for scholars using solutions li...
Article
Full-text available
Background Movement is central to understanding the ecology of animals. The most robustly definable segments of an individual’s lifetime track are its diel activity routines (DARs). This robustness is due to fixed start and end points set by a 24-h clock that depends on the individual’s quotidian schedule. An analysis of day-to-day variation in the...
Article
Full-text available
Background There is growing attention to individuality in movement, its causes and consequences. Similarly to other well-established personality traits (e.g., boldness or sociability), conspecifics also differ repeatedly in their spatial behaviors, forming behavioral types (“spatial-BTs”). These spatial-BTs are typically described as the difference...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background There is growing attention to individuality in movement, its causes and consequences. Accumulating evidence demonstrates that conspecifics differ repeatably in their spatial behaviors, forming behavioral types (“spatial-BTs”), similarly to other well-established personality traits (e.g., boldness or sociability). Spatial-BTs are typicall...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background. Movement is central to understanding the ecology of animals. The most easily definable segments of an individual’s lifetime track (i.e., movement path defined by a relocation data time series) are its diel activity routines (DARs). This definability is due to fixed start and end points set by a 24-hour clock that depends on the individu...
Article
Sand scorpions of the genus Buthacus Birula, 1908 (Buthidae C.L. Koch, 1837) are widespread in the sandy deserts of the Palearctic region, occurring from the Atlantic coast of West Africa across the Sahara, and throughout the Middle East to Central Asia. The limits of Buthacus, its two species groups, and many of its species remain unclear, and in...
Article
Full-text available
Scorpions of the genus ButhacusBirula, 1908 (Buthidae C.L. Koch, 1837), commonly known as “sand scorpions,” are widespread in the sandy deserts of the Palearctic, from West Africa to India. Although many new species of Buthacus were described in recent years, no modern revision exists for the genus and the limits of many infrageneric taxa remain un...
Article
Full-text available
Recreation activities in developed landscapes may add additional stressors that affect wildlife spatial and temporal activity patterns. We assessed medium to large mammal species response to a tourist scenic route in an agro-ecological mosaic landscape of the Shikma region, Israel. We placed 60 camera traps in an agro-ecological matrix and recorded...

Network

Cited By