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Bird Radar Validation in the Field by Time-Referencing Line-Transect Surveys

Track-while-scan bird radars are widely used in ornithological studies, but often the precise detection capabilities of these systems are unknown. Quantification of radar performance is essential to avoid observational biases, which requires practical methods for validating a radar’s detection capab...

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Autores principales: Dokter, Adriaan M., Baptist, Martin J., Ens, Bruno J., Krijgsveld, Karen L., van Loon, E. Emiel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3774623/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24066103
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074129
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author Dokter, Adriaan M.
Baptist, Martin J.
Ens, Bruno J.
Krijgsveld, Karen L.
van Loon, E. Emiel
author_facet Dokter, Adriaan M.
Baptist, Martin J.
Ens, Bruno J.
Krijgsveld, Karen L.
van Loon, E. Emiel
author_sort Dokter, Adriaan M.
collection PubMed
description Track-while-scan bird radars are widely used in ornithological studies, but often the precise detection capabilities of these systems are unknown. Quantification of radar performance is essential to avoid observational biases, which requires practical methods for validating a radar’s detection capability in specific field settings. In this study a method to quantify the detection capability of a bird radar is presented, as well a demonstration of this method in a case study. By time-referencing line-transect surveys, visually identified birds were automatically linked to individual tracks using their transect crossing time. Detection probabilities were determined as the fraction of the total set of visual observations that could be linked to radar tracks. To avoid ambiguities in assigning radar tracks to visual observations, the observer’s accuracy in determining a bird’s transect crossing time was taken into account. The accuracy was determined by examining the effect of a time lag applied to the visual observations on the number of matches found with radar tracks. Effects of flight altitude, distance, surface substrate and species size on the detection probability by the radar were quantified in a marine intertidal study area. Detection probability varied strongly with all these factors, as well as species-specific flight behaviour. The effective detection range for single birds flying at low altitude for an X-band marine radar based system was estimated at ∼1.5 km. Within this range the fraction of individual flying birds that were detected by the radar was 0.50±0.06 with a detection bias towards higher flight altitudes, larger birds and high tide situations. Besides radar validation, which we consider essential when quantification of bird numbers is important, our method of linking radar tracks to ground-truthed field observations can facilitate species-specific studies using surveillance radars. The methodology may prove equally useful for optimising tracking algorithms.
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spelling pubmed-37746232013-09-24 Bird Radar Validation in the Field by Time-Referencing Line-Transect Surveys Dokter, Adriaan M. Baptist, Martin J. Ens, Bruno J. Krijgsveld, Karen L. van Loon, E. Emiel PLoS One Research Article Track-while-scan bird radars are widely used in ornithological studies, but often the precise detection capabilities of these systems are unknown. Quantification of radar performance is essential to avoid observational biases, which requires practical methods for validating a radar’s detection capability in specific field settings. In this study a method to quantify the detection capability of a bird radar is presented, as well a demonstration of this method in a case study. By time-referencing line-transect surveys, visually identified birds were automatically linked to individual tracks using their transect crossing time. Detection probabilities were determined as the fraction of the total set of visual observations that could be linked to radar tracks. To avoid ambiguities in assigning radar tracks to visual observations, the observer’s accuracy in determining a bird’s transect crossing time was taken into account. The accuracy was determined by examining the effect of a time lag applied to the visual observations on the number of matches found with radar tracks. Effects of flight altitude, distance, surface substrate and species size on the detection probability by the radar were quantified in a marine intertidal study area. Detection probability varied strongly with all these factors, as well as species-specific flight behaviour. The effective detection range for single birds flying at low altitude for an X-band marine radar based system was estimated at ∼1.5 km. Within this range the fraction of individual flying birds that were detected by the radar was 0.50±0.06 with a detection bias towards higher flight altitudes, larger birds and high tide situations. Besides radar validation, which we consider essential when quantification of bird numbers is important, our method of linking radar tracks to ground-truthed field observations can facilitate species-specific studies using surveillance radars. The methodology may prove equally useful for optimising tracking algorithms. Public Library of Science 2013-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3774623/ /pubmed/24066103 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074129 Text en © 2013 Dokter et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dokter, Adriaan M.
Baptist, Martin J.
Ens, Bruno J.
Krijgsveld, Karen L.
van Loon, E. Emiel
Bird Radar Validation in the Field by Time-Referencing Line-Transect Surveys
title Bird Radar Validation in the Field by Time-Referencing Line-Transect Surveys
title_full Bird Radar Validation in the Field by Time-Referencing Line-Transect Surveys
title_fullStr Bird Radar Validation in the Field by Time-Referencing Line-Transect Surveys
title_full_unstemmed Bird Radar Validation in the Field by Time-Referencing Line-Transect Surveys
title_short Bird Radar Validation in the Field by Time-Referencing Line-Transect Surveys
title_sort bird radar validation in the field by time-referencing line-transect surveys
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3774623/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24066103
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074129
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