Kevin Titus’s research while affiliated with Boise State University and other places

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Publications (2)


Figure 1. The Clark global positioning system Animal Tracking System collar, which can be sized to fit most livestock and large, terrestrial wildlife species, including A, Cattle and elk (990 g), and B, domestic or wild sheep, goats, deer, and wolves (720 g). The sheep/wolf-sized collars use shorter belting lengths and a smaller enclosure (box) to reduce bulk and weight. 
Figure 2. The Clark global positioning system Animal Tracking System hand-held base station including personal digital assistant, spread- spectrum radio transceiver, and waterproof case. 
Figure 3. Schematic illustrating the placement and electrical connections for all the electronic components of the Clark global positioning system Animal Tracking System collar.
An Advanced, Low-Cost, GPS-Based Animal Tracking System
  • Article
  • Full-text available

May 2006

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16,532 Reads

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100 Citations

Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Douglas E. Johnson

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Mark A. Kniep

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[...]

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Kevin Titus

An improved global positioning system (GPS)-based animal tracking system is needed to meet quickly evolving demands of ecological research, range livestock production, and natural resource management. Commercially available tracking systems lack the data storage capacity needed to frequently collect animal location data (e.g., 15-minute intervals or less) over long-term deployment periods (e.g., 1 year or more). Some commercial systems have remote data-download capabilities, reducing the need to recapture tagged animals for data retrieval, but these systems download data via satellite (Argos), global system for mobile communications (GSM) cellular telephone, or telemetry radio frequencies. Satellite systems are excessively expensive, and GSM cellular coverage is extremely limited within the United States. Radio-based systems use narrow-band very-high- or ultra-high frequencies requiring the user to obtain frequency allocations. None of these existing systems were designed to provide continual, real-time data access. The Clark GPS Animal Tracking System (Clark ATS) was developed to meet the evolving demands of animal ethologists, ecologists, natural resource managers, and livestock producers. The Clark ATS uses memory-card technology for expandable data storage from 16 megabytes to 8 gigabytes. Remote data downloading and program uploading is accomplished using spread-spectrum radio transceivers, which do not require narrow-band radio frequency allocations. These radios also transmit, at a user-defined time interval, a real-time, GPS-location beacon to any Clark ATS base station within range (about 24 km or 15 miles line of sight). Advances incorporated into the Clark ATS make it possible to evaluate animal behavior at very fine spatial- and temporal-resolution over long periods of time. The real-time monitoring provided by this system enables researchers to accurately examine animal distribution and activity responses to acute, short-term disturbances relative to longer-term behavioral patterns. The Clark ATS also provides a huge time- and cost-savings to researchers and natural resource managers attempting to relocate a tagged animal in the field for direct observation or other operations.

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Figure 1. The Clark global positioning system Animal Tracking System collar, which can be sized to fit most livestock and large, terrestrial wildlife species, including A, Cattle and elk (990 g), and B, domestic or wild sheep, goats, deer, and wolves (720 g). The sheep/wolf-sized collars use shorter belting lengths and a smaller enclosure (box) to reduce bulk and weight.
Figure 2. The Clark global positioning system Animal Tracking System hand-held base station including personal digital assistant, spreadspectrum radio transceiver, and waterproof case.
Figure 3. Schematic illustrating the placement and electrical connections for all the electronic components of the Clark global positioning system Animal Tracking System collar.  
An Advanced, Low-Cost, GPS-Based Animal Tracking System

January 2006

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623 Reads

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4 Citations

Rangelands

An improved global positioning system (GPS)-based animal tracking system is needed to meet quickly evolving demands of ecological research, range livestock production, and natural resource management. Commercially available tracking systems lack the data storage capacity needed to frequently collect animal location data (e.g., 15-minute intervals or less) over long-term deployment periods (e.g., 1 year or more). Some commercial systems have remote data-download capabilities, reducing the need to recapture tagged animals for data retrieval, but these systems download data via satellite (Argos), global system for mobile communications (GSM) cellular telephone, or telemetry radio frequencies. Satellite systems are excessively expensive, and GSM cellular coverage is extremely limited within the United States. Radio-based systems use narrow-band very-high- or ultra-high frequencies requiring the user to obtain frequency allocations. None of these existing systems were designed to provide continual, real-time data access. The Clark GPS Animal Tracking System (Clark ATS) was developed to meet the evolving demands of animal ethologists, ecologists, natural resource managers, and livestock producers. The Clark ATS uses memory-card technology for expandable data storage from 16 megabytes to 8 gigabytes. Remote data downloading and program uploading is accomplished using spread-spectrum radio transceivers, which do not require narrow-band radio frequency allocations. These radios also transmit, at a user-defined time interval, a real-time, GPS-location beacon to any Clark ATS base station within range (about 24 km or 15 miles line of sight). Advances incorporated into the Clark ATS make it possible to evaluate animal behavior at very fine spatial- and temporal-resolution over long periods of time. The real-time monitoring provided by this system enables researchers to accurately examine animal distribution and activity responses to acute, short-term disturbances relative to longer- term behavioral patterns. The Clark ATS also provides a huge time- and cost-savings to researchers and natural resource managers attempting to relocate a tagged animal in the field for direct observation or other operations.

Citations (2)


... However, these studies took place in highly urbanised areas where cellular phone signal remains strong and reliable over the study area, therefore yielding consistent data. A major limitation occurs when countries that have not adopted a GSM system for their mobile network; even so, data recovery is limited to the immediate neighbourhood of communication towers [66,68]. The reliability of receiving data from the Phase A tags in India was highly variable, primarily due to certain networks providing poor coverage. ...

Reference:

Message in a bottle: Open source technology to track the movement of plastic pollution
An Advanced, Low-Cost, GPS-Based Animal Tracking System

Rangelands

... Researchers therefore mostly opt for biologgers that are typically recaptured using very high frequency (VHF) when tags are detached from the animal and found at the sea surface [15] or by underwater triangulation (using acoustical pingers) [16]. Still, recovering data from species living in remote areas relies either on very low recapture rate or satellite uplink with narrow bandwidths, which severely limits the amount of biotelemetry data that can be recovered [17]. To present day, monitoring marine megafauna uses costly and proprietary satellite constellations, while biologgers typically struggle with battery longevity, fuel, and time costs in recapturing them from the pelagic areas [18], [19]. ...

An Advanced, Low-Cost, GPS-Based Animal Tracking System

Rangeland Ecology & Management