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RSEC Volume 7 | June 2021 | Number 2 R RSE2_v7_i2_oc.indd 1 SE2_v7_i2_oc.indd 1 5 5/31/2021 12:07:31 PM /31/2021 12:07:31 PM Aims and Scope Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation provides a forum for rapid, peer-reviewed publication of novel, multidisciplinary research at the interface between remote sensing science and ecology and conservation. The journal prioritizes fi ndings that advance the scientifi c basis of ecology and conservation, promoting the development of remote-sensing based methods relevant to the management of land use and biological systems at all levels, from populations and species to ecosystems and biomes. The journal defi nes remote sensing in its broadest sense, including data acquisition by hand-held and fi xed ground-based sensors, such as camera traps and acoustic recorders, and sensors on airplanes and satellites. The intended journal’s audience includes ecologists, conservation scientists, policy makers, managers of terrestrial and aquatic systems, remote sensing scientists, and students. Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation publishes original research articles, reviews, Editorial, Policy Forum, and Interdisciplinary Perspectives. Original research papers must report well-conducted research with conclusions supported by the data presented in the paper. Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation is a Wiley Open Access journal, one of a new series of peer-reviewed titles publishing quality research with speed and effi ciency. For further information visit the Wiley Open Access website at http://www.wileyopenaccess.com. Open Access and Copyright All articles published by Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation are fully open access: immediately freely available to read, download and share. All articles accepted from 2014 are published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. All articles accepted before this date were published under a Creative Commons Attribution License. The Creative Commons Attribution License permits which allows users to copy, distribute and transmit an article, adapt the article and make commercial use of the article. The CC BY license permits commercial and non-commercial re-use of an open access article, as long as the author is properly attributed. Copyright on any research article in a journal published by Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation is retained by the author(s). Authors grant Wiley a license to publish the article and identify itself as the original publisher. Authors also grant any third party the right to use the article freely as long as its integrity is maintained and its original authors, citation details and publisher are identifi ed. Further information about open access license and copyright can be found at http://www.wileyopenaccess.com/details/content/12f25db4c87/Copyright--License.html. Purchasing Print Reprints Print reprints of Wiley Open Access articles can be purchased from corporatesales@wiley.com. Disclaimer The Publisher and Editors cannot be held responsible for errors or any consequences arising from the use of information contained in this journal; the views and opinions expressed do not necessarily refl ect those of the Publisher and Editors, neither does the publication of advertisements constitute any endorsements by the Publisher and Editors of the products advertised. Wiley Open Access articles posted to repositories or websites are without warranty from Wiley of any kind, either express or implied, including, but not limited to, warranties of merchantability, fi tness for a particular purpose, or non-infringement. To the fullest extent permitted by law Wiley disclaims all liability for any loss or damage arising out of, or in connection with, the use of or inability to use the content. R RSE2_v7_i2_issue_info.indd 1 SE2_v7_i2_issue_info.indd 1 6 6/6/2021 4:55:20 PM /6/2021 4:55:20 PM Editor-in-Chief Nathalie Pettorelli Zoological Society of London, UK Honorary Editors Gregory Asner Gregoire Dubois Tim O’Brien Stanford University, European Commission Joint Research Centre, Wildlife Conservation Society, USA Italy USA Zoe Davies Claudia Kuenzer Aurélie Shapiro University of Kent, UK German Aerospace Center, Germany WWF-Germany, Germany Senior Editors Mathias Disney Kate He Vincent Lecours Marcus Rowcliffe Temuulen Sankey, University College London Murray State University, University of Florida, USA Zoological Society of Northern Arizona and NERC National USA London, UK University, USA Centre for Earth Kylie Scales Observation (NCEO), UK University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia Associate Editors Abdulhakim Abdi Anna Carter Natalie Kelly Denise Risch Lund University, Sweden Australian Antarctic Division, Iowa State University, USA Scottish Association for Marine Australia Science (SAMS), UK Jorge Ahumada, Nicola Clerici Tobias Kümmerle Conservation International, USA Universidad del Rosario, Francesco Rovero Humboldt-University Berlin, Colombia Karen Anderson Germany University of Florence, Italy University of Exeter, UK Antoine Collin Shaun Levick Gwilym Rowlands Carlos de Angelo Université PSL, France CSIRO, Australia University of Oxford, UK National Scientifi c and Technical Anna Cord Research Council (CONICET), Xuehua Liu Rahel Sollmann Helmholtz Centre for Environmen- Argentina Tsinghua University, China University of California Davis, tal Research – UFZ, Germany Mailys Lopes Dolors Armenteras USA Dan Friess Zoological Society of London, UK Colombia National University, National University of Singapore, Matthew Van Den Broeke Colombia Benjamin Misiuk Singapore University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Dalhousie University, Canada Christos Astaras USA Jean Guillard Forest Research Institute, Justin Moat French National Institute for Greece Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Oliver Wearn Agricultural Research (INRA), UK Zoological Society of London, Stephanie Bohlman France Margarita Mulero-Pázmány University of Florida, USA UK José Luís Hernández Stefanoni Liverpool John Moores University, Phil Bouchet Centro de Investigación Científi ca UK Martin Wegmann University of St Andrews, UK de Yucatán A.C., Mexico University of Würzburg, Nicholas Murray Doreen Boyd Tim Hofmeester Germany James Cook University, Australia University of Nottingham, UK Swedish University of Agricultural Dimitris Poursanidis Jian Zhang Sciences, Sweden Graeme Buchanan Foundation for Research and East China Normal University, Royal Society for the Protection Alice Jones Technology - Hellas (FORTH), China of Birds, UK University of Adelaide, Australia Greece András Zlinszky Anthony Caravaggi Tommaso Jucker Nicola Quick University of South Wales, UK CSIRO, Australia Duke University, USA Aarhus University, Denmark R RSE2_v7_i2_issue_info.indd 2 SE2_v7_i2_issue_info.indd 2 6 6/6/2021 4:55:20 PM /6/2021 4:55:20 PM Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation Volume 7, Issue 2 June 2021 Contents Original Research Are camera traps a reliable method for estimating activity patterns? A case study comparing technologies for estimating brown hyaena activity curves ............................................................................................................................ 129 Sarah Edwards, Jenny Noack, Louis Heyns & Diethardt Rodenwoldt Discovery of new colonies by Sentinel2 reveals good and bad news for emperor penguins .............................................. 139 Peter T. Fretwell & Philip N. Trathan Illuminating den-tree selection by an arboreal mammal using terrestrial laser scanning in northern Australia .............. 154 Alyson M. Stobo-Wilson, Brett P. Murphy, Teigan Cremona, Susan M. Carthew & Shaun R. Levick Integration of close-range underwater photogrammetry with inspection and mesh processing software: a novel approach for quantifying ecological dynamics of temperate biogenic reefs ..................................................................... 169 Daniele Ventura, Stanislas F. Dubois, Andrea Bonifazi, Giovanna Jona Lasinio, Marco Seminara, Maria F. Gravina & Giandomenico Ardizzone The infl uence of isolated thunderstorms and the low-level wind fi eld on nocturnally migrating birds in central North America ...................................................................................................................................................................... 187 Matthew S. Van Den Broeke & Timothy J. Gunkel Remote sensing data fusion as a tool for biomass prediction in extensive grasslands invaded by L. polyphyllus .............. 198 Damian Schulze-Brüninghoff, Michael Wachendorf & Thomas Astor Dual visible-thermal camera approach facilitates drone surveys of colonial marshbirds .................................................. 214 Ann E. McKellar, Nicholas G. Shephard & Dominique Chabot Monitoring spring phenology of individual tree crowns using drone-acquired NDVI data ............................................. 227 Dominic Fawcett, Jonathan Bennie & Karen Anderson UAV thermal image detects genetic trait differences among populations and genotypes of Fremont cottonwood ( Populus fremontii , Salicaceae) ............................................................................................................................................. 245 Temuulen Sankey, Kevin Hultine, Davis Blasini, Dan Koepke, Nathaniel Bransky, Kevin Grady, Hillary Cooper, Catherine Gehring & Gerard Allan Regional-scale forest restoration effects on ecosystem resiliency to drought: a synthesis of vegetation and moisture trends on Google Earth Engine ............................................................................................................................................ 259 Temuulen Sankey, Adam Belmonte, Richard Massey & Jackson Leonard Cloud-native seascape mapping of Mozambique’s Quirimbas National Park with Sentinel-2 ......................................... 275 Dimitris Poursanidis, Dimosthenis Traganos, Luisa Teixeira, Aurélie Shapiro & Lara Muaves Let your maps be fuzzy!—Class probabilities and fl oristic gradients as alternatives to crisp mapping for remote sensing of vegetation ............................................................................................................................................................ 292 Hannes Feilhauer, András Zlinszky, Adam Kania, Giles M. Foody, Daniel Doktor, Angela Lausch & Sebastian Schmidtlein Monitoring ash dieback ( Hymenoscyphus fraxineus ) in British forests using hyperspectral remote sensing .................... 306 Aland H. Y. Chan, Chloe Barnes, Tom Swinfi eld & David A. Coomes Wildlife trail or systematic? Camera trap placement has little effect on estimates of mammal diversity in a tropical forest in Gabon ....................................................................................................................................................... 321 Davy Fonteyn, Cédric Vermeulen, Nicolas Defl andre, Daniel Cornelis, Simon Lhoest, Fructueux G. A. Houngbégnon, Jean-Louis Doucet & Adeline Fayolle ISSN: 2056-3485 (Online) R RSE2_v7_i2_toc.indd 1 SE2_v7_i2_toc.indd 1 6 6/8/2021 8:56:55 AM /8/2021 8:56:55 AM
Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation – Wiley
Published: Jun 1, 2021
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