Analysis of mixtures of birds and insects in weather radar data

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Weather radars are increasingly used to study the spatial-temporal dynamics of airborne birds and insects. These two taxa often co-occur and separating their contributions remains a major analytical challenge. Most studies have restricted analyses to locations, seasons, and periods when one or the other taxa dominates. In this study, we describe an analytical method to estimate the proportion of birds and insects from vertical profiles of biological reflectivities, using a minimal number of assumptions on the airspeeds of birds and insects. We evaluated our method on understudied regions where airborne insect density is too high for existing approaches of studying bird migration with weather radars: the tropics (Colombia) and the southern temperate zone (Southeast Australia). Our method estimates that bird and insect signals routinely reach similar magnitudes in these regions. Retrieved patterns across daily and annual cycles reflected expected biological patterns that are indicative of migratory and non-migratory movements in both climates and migration systems. Compared to fixed airspeed thresholding, we obtain finer separation and retain more spatial-temporal complexity that is crucial to revealing aerial habitat use of both taxa. Our analytical procedure is readily implemented into existing software, empowering ecologists to explore aerial ecosystems outside the northern temperate zone, as well as diurnal migration of birds and insects that remains heavily understudied.

Lay summary

  • We developed a new method to differentiate between birds and insects in weather radar data.

  • This method uses minimal assumptions about the flight speeds of birds and insects.

  • We tested the method in regions with high insect density: the tropics (Colombia) and southern temperate zone (Southeast Australia).

  • Our method estimated proportions of birds and insects that captured expected patterns of daily and annual movements, which were indicative of migratory and non-migratory movement of both taxa.

  • Unlike fixed airspeed criteria for bird and insect separation, our approach provides a more detailed understanding of aerial habitat use by both birds and insects.

  • This method can be easily added to existing software, helping ecologists study bird and insect movements in less-studied areas and ecosystems.

Article activity feed