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Drones reveal spatial patterning of sympatric Alaskan pinniped species and drivers of their local distributions

Publication ,  Journal Article
Larsen, GD; Seymour, AC; Richmond, EL; Divine, LM; Moreland, EE; Newton, E; London, JM; Johnston, DW
Published in: Drone Systems and Applications
January 1, 2022

The Arctic and its adjacent ecosystems are undergoing rapid ecological reorganization in response to the effects of global climate change, and sentinel species provide critical updates as these changes unfold. This study leverages emerging remote sensing techniques to reveal fine-scale drivers of distribution and terrestrial habitat use of two sympatric sentinel species of the central Bering Sea, the Pacific harbor seal (Phoca vitulina richardii (Gray, 1864)) and the northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus (Linnaeus, 1758)), at non-breeding haul-outs in the Pribilof Islands. We surveyed these species using unoccupied aircraft systems with thermal and visible-light photography, and we applied distributional modeling techniques to quantify the relative influence of habitat characteristics and social dynamics on the local distributions of these species. Drone imagery yielded locations and population counts of each species, and spatial data products allowed quantitative characterization of occupied sites, revealing that conspecific attraction is a driver of local site selection for both species, and Pacific harbor seals and northern fur seals are differentially limited by terrain characteristics. These findings represent new applications of species distribution modeling at local scales, made possible by ultra-high resolution drone surveillance and photogrammetric techniques, which add new spatial context to past observations and future scenarios in this changing ecosystem.

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Published In

Drone Systems and Applications

DOI

EISSN

2564-4939

ISSN

2564-4939

Publication Date

January 1, 2022

Volume

10

Issue

1

Start / End Page

235 / 255

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Larsen, G. D., Seymour, A. C., Richmond, E. L., Divine, L. M., Moreland, E. E., Newton, E., … Johnston, D. W. (2022). Drones reveal spatial patterning of sympatric Alaskan pinniped species and drivers of their local distributions. Drone Systems and Applications, 10(1), 235–255. https://doi.org/10.1139/dsa-2021-0050
Larsen, Gregory D., Alexander C. Seymour, Erin L. Richmond, Lauren M. Divine, Erin E. Moreland, Everette Newton, Josh M. London, and David W. Johnston. “Drones reveal spatial patterning of sympatric Alaskan pinniped species and drivers of their local distributions.” Drone Systems and Applications 10, no. 1 (January 1, 2022): 235–55. https://doi.org/10.1139/dsa-2021-0050.
Larsen GD, Seymour AC, Richmond EL, Divine LM, Moreland EE, Newton E, et al. Drones reveal spatial patterning of sympatric Alaskan pinniped species and drivers of their local distributions. Drone Systems and Applications. 2022 Jan 1;10(1):235–55.
Larsen, Gregory D., et al. “Drones reveal spatial patterning of sympatric Alaskan pinniped species and drivers of their local distributions.” Drone Systems and Applications, vol. 10, no. 1, Canadian Science Publishing, Jan. 2022, pp. 235–55. Crossref, doi:10.1139/dsa-2021-0050.
Larsen GD, Seymour AC, Richmond EL, Divine LM, Moreland EE, Newton E, London JM, Johnston DW. Drones reveal spatial patterning of sympatric Alaskan pinniped species and drivers of their local distributions. Drone Systems and Applications. Canadian Science Publishing; 2022 Jan 1;10(1):235–255.

Published In

Drone Systems and Applications

DOI

EISSN

2564-4939

ISSN

2564-4939

Publication Date

January 1, 2022

Volume

10

Issue

1

Start / End Page

235 / 255

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing