@article{f42b87ab932441bf9667e24fe8684ad9,
title = "Developing low-cost tags: Assessing the ecological impacts of tethered tag technology on host species",
abstract = "Understanding and mitigating potential effects of tags on instrumented animals is a crucial consideration when developing new tracking techniques. Some populations of aquatic megafauna spend the majority of their lives occupying small home ranges, yet conventional finescale tracking methods generally provide a limited number of non-continuous locations, while new technology is cost prohibitive. We developed a low-cost tethered telemetry system ( < 185 USD tag-1) for short-term tracking of marine turtles in nearshore environments that incorporated standard GPS data loggers and VHF transmitters into buoyant tags of 3 different designs. We then estimated the drag of each tethered tag using an instrumented flow tunnel, deployed them on freeliving green turtles along Mexico's Baja California peninsula, and compared movement patterns of turtles equipped with high- and low-drag tags. All tags provided high-resolution tracks that ranged from 5.2 to 184.0 h (mean ± SD = 43.2 ± 37.8 h; n = 26 turtles) for a total of 1122 h. We found that the first 2 tag designs increased drag on large juveniles at typical swimming speeds by approximately 7 to 10%, which is comparable to predicted drag increases incurred by similarly sized green turtles from most commercially available electronic tags. By contrast, the third tag design increased drag by 1% or less. Turtles fitted with the high-drag tags made fewer course changes and exhibited straighter (less tortuous) movements than those fitted with the low-drag tags. Although it is unclear if the observed behavioral differences were due entirely to the tags, our results highlight the importance of evaluating potential ecological impacts of telemetry devices on host species, particularly when developing new technology.",
keywords = "Animal movements, Animal tags, Behavior, Hydrodynamic drag, Megafauna, Sea turtle, Tagging, Tracking",
author = "Senko, {Jesse F.} and Megill, {William M.} and Brooks, {Louise B.} and Templeton, {Robert P.} and Volker Koch",
note = "Funding Information: Acknowledgements. Fieldwork for this study was funded by a grant from the Earthwatch Institute, the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, the Homeland Foundation, the Lerner Gray Foundation, Myers Oceanographic Trust, the PADI Foundation, the Laguna San Ignacio Wetlands Ecosystem Science Project, and Moss Landing Marine Laboratories at San Jose State University (SJSU). Field data were collected while J.F.S. and L.B.B. were students at the University of Florida and SJSU, respectively. We thank Taylor Wamberg for his help with flow tank trials. Fred Senko, Agnese Mancini, Susanne Megill, Amee Lewis, Rianna Burnham, Wallace J. Nichols, ProPeninsula, and the staff at Kuyima Ecotourism Camp provided logistical, management, and field support. Fred Senko provided invaluable engineering guidance, and Jackie Maud introduced us to path tortuosity. We thank all volunteers from the Earthwatch expedition {\textquoteleft}Tracking Baja{\textquoteright}s Black Sea Turtles{\textquoteright}, Ranulfo Mayoral, Rodrigo Rangel, Julio Solis, Grupo Tortuguero, and the School for Field Studies students and staff for their invaluable field assistance. All research activities were authorized by the Secretar{\'i}a para el Medio Ambiente y los Recursos Naturales (SEMARNAT) (permit nos. 280499.213.03 1565, 280700.213. 03 2619, SGPA/DGVS/06840/07, SGPA/ DGVS/ 09142/ 07, SGPA/DGVS/01395/10), the SJSU Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC no. 805), and the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Animal Research Committee (permit no. 017-09WEC). The Landsat image we used was courtesy of the US Geological Survey, and we thank Maxwell Wilson for help with map making. Fred Senko, Maxwell Wilson, Ray Carthy, and 2 anonymous reviewers provided helpful comments and suggestions that greatly improved the final manuscript. Funding Information: Fieldwork for this study was funded by a grant from the Earthwatch Institute, the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, the Homeland Foundation, the Lerner Gray Foundation, Myers Oceanographic Trust, the PADI Foundation, the Laguna San Ignacio Wetlands Ecosystem Science Project, and Moss Landing Marine Laboratories at San Jose State University (SJSU). Field data were collected while J.F.S. and L.B.B. were students at the University of Florida and SJSU, respectively. We thank Taylor Wamberg for his help with flow tank trials. Fred Senko, Agnese Mancini, Susanne Megill, Amee Lewis, Rianna Burnham, Wallace J. Nichols, ProPeninsula, and the staff at Kuyima Ecotourism Camp provided logistical, management, and field support. Fred Senko provided invaluable engineering guidance, and Jackie Maud introduced us to path tortuosity. We thank all volunteers from the Earthwatch expedition 'Tracking Baja's Black Sea Turtles', Ranulfo Mayoral, Rodrigo Rangel, Julio Solis, Grupo Tortuguero, and the School for Field Studies students and staff for their invaluable field assistance. All research activities were authorized by the Secretar?a para el Medio Ambiente y los Recursos Naturales (SEMARNAT) (permit nos. 280499.213.03 1565, 280700.213. 03 2619, SGPA/DGVS/06840/07, SGPA/DGVS/09142/07, SGPA/DGVS/01395/10), the SJSU Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC no. 805), and the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Animal Research Committee (permit no. 017-09WEC). The Landsat image we used was courtesy of the US Geological Survey, and we thank Maxwell Wilson for help with map making. Fred Senko, Maxwell Wilson, Ray Carthy, and 2 anonymous reviewers provided helpful comments and suggestions that greatly improved the final manuscript. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The authors 2019.",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.3354/esr00967",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "39",
pages = "255--268",
journal = "Endangered Species Research",
issn = "1863-5407",
publisher = "Inter-Research",
}