animalmovement-canmove.blogspot.com
CAnMove - Centre for Animal Movement Research: News blog moved
http://animalmovement-canmove.blogspot.com/2015/04/news-blog-moved.html
CAnMove - Centre for Animal Movement Research. More information about CAnMove and the research activities within the programme can be found at:. Http:/ canmove.lu.se. Onsdag 29 april 2015. The CAnMove news blog has moved to canmove.lu.se! Prenumerera på: Kommentarer till inlägget (Atom). New publication on passerine migration. New model on flapping flight.
canmovefieldblog.blogspot.com
CAnMove Field blog: From long-distance and short-distance migrants: A migratory season at Falsterbo
http://canmovefieldblog.blogspot.com/2014/11/from-long-distance-and-short-distance.html
From long-distance and short-distance migrants: A migratory season at Falsterbo. In my past blog entry I have told you about migratory bottlenecks in general, Falsterbo in particular, methods to monitor migration and the sophisticated radio-telemetry system CanMove has on the Falsterbo Peninsula. So today it is time to write about what I am actually doing there. A Robin hanging safely in a mist net. Experienced ringers can take out birds quickly and safe. A so called short-distance migrant. On a typical ...
canmovefieldblog.blogspot.com
CAnMove Field blog: The Jackdaw project
http://canmovefieldblog.blogspot.com/2014/06/the-jackdaw-project.html
The left nestling hatched one day later than the rest. A female Jackdaw with a brood patch. Also provides an easy way to distinguish the sexes. But this characteristic is only available during the breeding season. Soon the females will grow feathers on the belly again. Naked, blind and hungry. Are all nestlings naked when they hatch? No, young of some species have feathers when they hatch. Not real feathers, but. 12-14 days old nestlings. When the nestlings were 12-14 days old, we caught the parents to t...
canmovefieldblog.blogspot.com
CAnMove Field blog: Jackdaws
http://canmovefieldblog.blogspot.com/2014/08/jackdaws.html
A group of Jackdaws and some Rooks flying towards a night roost. In a previous post I told about our new project on Jackdaws and gave some information on the biology of these birds. I also mentioned that we attached GPS-loggers to some birds. But what are GPS-loggers? How do they work? And why did we attach them to some birds? The GPS-loggers we use for the Jackdaws have another very valuable function. Using an antenna one can download the data from the distance! Written by Christina Rengefors. On 8 June...
canmovefieldblog.blogspot.com
CAnMove Field blog: Quantifying behaviours from acceleration: the case of the Caspian tern.
http://canmovefieldblog.blogspot.com/2014/09/quantifying-behaviours-from.html
Quantifying behaviours from acceleration: the case of the Caspian tern. Fig 1 Caspian terns (dancing? At Norra Stenarna in June 2014. Picture taken by Ewa Karaszewska. Fig 2 Field work at Stenarna while ringing chicks. Visible hide. Photo taken by Kozue Shiomi. Fig 3 Spring trap located on the gull’s nest (left). Tagged and marked Caspian tern (right). Picture taken by Ewa Karaszewska (left) and Kozue Shiomi (right). But for now, enjoy the chicks of Caspian terns! Video taken by Ewa Karaszewska]. During ...
move-ecol-minerva.huji.ac.il
Minerva Center for Movement Echology: related groups and resources
http://move-ecol-minerva.huji.ac.il/page/14
Director of Minerva, Prof. Ran Nathan's Home Site. Related groups and resources. Ndash; The Centre for Animal Movement Research (CAnMove) is a center of excellence for trans-disciplinary research on the causes and consequences of animal movements, funded by a Linnaeus grant from the Swedish Research Council and Lund University and coordinated by Prof. Susanne Åkesson (Lund University, Sweden). Ndash; Move is an action of the COST. Introduction to movement ecology. General concepts and framework.
animalmovement-canmove.blogspot.com
CAnMove - Centre for Animal Movement Research: april 2015
http://animalmovement-canmove.blogspot.com/2015_04_01_archive.html
CAnMove - Centre for Animal Movement Research. More information about CAnMove and the research activities within the programme can be found at:. Http:/ canmove.lu.se. Onsdag 29 april 2015. The CAnMove news blog has moved to canmove.lu.se! Måndag 13 april 2015. New publication on passerine migration. Weather and fuel reserves determine departure and flight decisions in passerines migrating across the Baltic Sea". Is published in Animal Behaviour. Torsdag 9 april 2015. New model on flapping flight. Nature ...