Allowing for redundancy and environmental effects in estimates of home range utilization distributions

Abstract
Real location data for radio tagged animals can be challenging to analyze. They can be somewhat redundant, since successive observations of an animal slowly wandering through its environment may well show very similar locations. The data set can possess trends over time or be irregularly timed, and they can report locations in environments with features that should be incorporated to some degree. Also, the periods of observation may be too short to provide reliable estimates of characteristics such as inter‐observation correlation levels that can be used in conventional time‐series analyses. Moreover, stationarity (in the sense of the data being generated by a source that provides observations of constant mean, variance and correlation structure) may not be present. This article considers an adaptation of the kernel density estimator for estimating home ranges, an adaptation which allows for these various complications and which works well in the absence of exact (or precise) information about correlation structure and parameters. Modifications to allow for irregularly timed observations, non‐stationarity and heterogeneous environments are discussed and illustrated. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.