When tracking wildlife with automated radio telemetry over vast distances, the challenge of deploying enough receivers to get detections grows exponentially. To remedy this, data can be shared between all researchers so that essentially everyone is sharing receivers. This greatly expands the potential for this technology, but it comes with the added responsibility of coordinating projects, detection data and metadata – that’s where Motus comes in.
The Motus Wildlife Tracking System is an international collaborative network of researchers that use automated radio telemetry to simultaneously track hundreds of individuals of numerous species of birds, bats, and insects. The system enables a community of researchers, educators, organizations, and citizens to undertake impactful research and education on the ecology and conservation of migratory animals. When compared to other technologies, automated radio telemetry currently allows researchers to track the smallest animals possible, with high temporal and geographic precision, over great distances.
The philosophy behind Motus is that we’re all working together. At its core, Motus is community science. A community of researchers around the world conducting research on animals that are tracked by a network of coordinated receiving stations. These stations are maintained by a community of researchers, organizations, non-profits, governments, and individuals. In order for this concept to work, the system requires a centralized database and management system that all participants use. Most importantly, in order for your tags to be detected on any other station in the network, or for other project tags to be detected elsewhere, projects, receivers and tags need to be registered with, and have data processed by Motus. While any automated telemetry project can operate in isolation, operating as a Motus project combines the collective impact of local, regional, and even hemispheric projects into one massive collaborative effort that expands the scale and scope of everyone’s work and maximizes the use of scarce research dollars. It also makes data available and more useful for future projects, collaborative endeavors and large-scale meta analyses.
It's FREE to register your project and receivers to the Motus network, contribute data from those receivers, and use the resources on the website. In order for transmitters to be detected by the network, they must be reregistered with Motus and are charged a nominal fee to support data processing and ongoing maintenance and development of the research software platform. See the collaboration policy and fee schedule for more information.
The collaborative nature of Motus relies on a certain level of transparency with respect to data. While basic project and tag summary information is made publicly available, researchers have the ability to customize data accessibility and keep their project and data private if necessary. See the collaboration policy for more information.
Coordinated global network of automated radio telemetry receivers. See Motus by the numbers.
Become part of a global research and conservation community.
Collaborators have full control over data access.
Projects can be designed based on the placement of third-party stations.
Tagging data from multiple projects can be utilized in large-scale studies.
Communication, troubleshooting, and consultation from other researchers in the community, Motus staff and technology partners via the Motus discussion group.
One centralized data hub at Birds Canada National Data Centre
Standardized data format across all projects
Permanent archive of data
Access to the research software platform data visualization and management tools
Metadata management platform
Combined data from multiple stations into one simple-to-use database accessible through R
Facilitated import to Movebank to access their tools and services
Data is available from all stations in the network as soon as it’s uploaded to motus.org
Receiver and data management tools
Automatic data streaming from the receiver to Motus.org for stations with internet connectivity
Public access to station and tag summary data, tracks, and maps via motus.org.
All data is automatically packaged and available in real-time through the Motus R Package
Opportunities to Join a community of scientists developing new code for data processing, modelling, and manipulation
Motus Research Software Platform visualization tools
Draws on community supported options for local-to-hemispheric tracking infrastructure
Partnerships with multiple technology firms for receivers and tags across numerous cutting-edge technologies
Open-source hardware and software solutions via sensorgnome.org
Movement, migration, and population ecology
Animal behavior and physiology
Environmental management
Population, survival, and species dynamics
Stopover, site-based, and full life-cycle knowledge
Informing use of flyways and landscapes
Undergraduate through postgraduate studies
Open framework for development, code, and analysis sharing
Grade 7-12 STEM curricula (science, technology, engineering, math)
Public engagement and storytelling
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