DocumentCode
1234192
Title
Quantifying Bird Density During Migratory Stopover Using Weather Surveillance Radar
Author
Buler, Jeffrey J. ; Diehl, Robert H.
Author_Institution
Univ. of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, MS, USA
Volume
47
Issue
8
fYear
2009
Firstpage
2741
Lastpage
2751
Abstract
Increasingly, data from weather surveillance radars are being used by biologists investigating the ecology and behavior of birds, insects, and bats in the aerosphere. Unfortunately, these radars quantify echoes caused by layered biological targets such as migrating birds in a manner that introduces bias in radar measures. We investigated the performance of a bias-adjustment algorithm that adjusts radar measures for vertical variation of reflectivity, nonstandard beam refraction, and spatial displacement of radar targets. We evaluated the efficacies of four variations of this algorithm by their ability to increase correspondence between radar reflectivity measured at two weather radar sites and the ground density of migrating birds measured during two autumn seasons and two spring seasons among 24 hardwood forest sites along the northern coast of the Gulf of Mexico. The algorithm integrated close-range reflectivity data from the five lowest elevation angle sweeps to derive high-resolution vertical profiles of reflectivity (VPRs) that closely corresponded to the observed vertical target density profiles based on a vertically oriented portable radar. The radar reflectivity of birds aloft near the onset of migratory flight was positively correlated with the bird density on the ground. All four radar data adjustment schemes that we tested produced significant improvement in the accuracy of bird density estimates relative to unadjusted radar data. In general, adjusting reflectivity based solely on the VPRs derived using observed refractive conditions yielded the most accurate radar-based estimates of bird density.
Keywords
Doppler radar; ecology; meteorological radar; reflectivity; remote sensing by radar; search radar; Gulf of Mexico; aerosphere; biology; ecology; layered biological targets; migrating bird density; migratory stopover; nonstandard beam refraction; radar reflectivity; target spatial displacement; vertical profiles of reflectivity; weather surveillance radar; Algorithms; Doppler radar; animals; correlation; radar data processing; refractivity;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0196-2892
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TGRS.2009.2014463
Filename
4813234
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