• DocumentCode
    829159
  • Title

    Designing an archival Satellite transmitter for life-long deployments on oceanic vertebrates: the life history transmitter

  • Author

    Horning, Markus ; Hill, Roger D.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Marine Biol., Texas A&M Univ., Galveston, TX
  • Volume
    30
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2005
  • Firstpage
    807
  • Lastpage
    817
  • Abstract
    Despite the widespread use of sophisticated telemetry transmitters in behavioral, physiological and ecological studies, few studies on population dynamics of oceanic vertebrates use such technology, primarily due to the difficulty of obtaining multi-year records from individual animals. We present the first telemetry transmitter specifically designed for collecting vital data from marine vertebrates over extended periods, up to a decade. The implantable Life History Transmitter records data throughout the life of a host animal. After the host animal dies, the tag is extruded, and, while floating on the ocean or lying on a beach, transmits previously stored data to orbiting satellites. For tags relying solely on end-of-deployment transmission, reliability and proper recognition of tag state is crucial. The Life History Transmitter uses heuristic tag state determination, in combination with simple error detection and fault tolerance measures, to increase tag reliability and likelihood of data recovery. We used a computer simulation of tag deployments and various sensor failures on a PC platform, in combination with time-accelerated simulations running on the actual deployment platform, to test the functionality of fault tolerance and error detection protocols
  • Keywords
    data acquisition; fault tolerance; oceanographic techniques; radio transmitters; satellite telemetry; tracking; zoology; archival satellite transmitter; data collection; end-of-deployment transmission; error detection; fault tolerance; heuristic tag state determination; life history transmitter; long term tracking; marine mammals; marine vertebrates; oceanic vertebrates; survival rate; tag reliability; telemetry transmitter; Animals; Computer errors; Computer simulation; Fault detection; Fault tolerance; History; Marine technology; Satellites; Telemetry; Transmitters; Error detection; LHX tag; fault tolerance; long term tracking; marine mammals; survival rates; tag reliability;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0364-9059
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JOE.2005.862135
  • Filename
    1593825