Animating Wildlife Movement Data for Researchers, Conservationists, and Urban Planners

Open-Source App Accelerates New Environmental Discoveries


Tracking and mapping animal migration patterns is vital for a balanced coexistence between wildlife and the expanding human footprint. With data on migratory patterns and habitats in hand, urban planners and conservationists alike can guide development and construction projects, balancing the needs of wildlife populations with those of human communities.

Gil Bohrer, a professor of civil, environmental, and geodetic engineering at Ohio State University, has spent years building tools to analyze animal movement data, including Environmental-Data Automated Track Annotation (Env-DATA) to link remote sensing data with animal tracks. He and his team created visualizations to show animal movement.

“Everybody always loved it,” he says.

After Env-DATA launched in 2011, researchers with animal data often approached him with requests for help building analysis tools and animations. So, when the NASA Ecological Forecasting Program provided an opportunity for Bohrer, developer Justine Missik, and user outreach specialist Sarah Davidson to make data analysis available to the community of users tracking animal movement, Bohrer had plenty of experience.

Bohrer organized a coalition of end users and launched Room to Roam: Yellowstone to Yukon Wildlife Movements (Room2Roam). This initiative’s goal is to establish a comprehensive archive of animal migration data for the region, providing a valuable resource for both research and practical applications in wildlife and resource management. With that data, Room2Roam can build tools to improve wildlife management, evaluate the effectiveness of protected areas, assess wildlife migration and movement, and prioritize conservation strategies in the Yellowstone to Yukon (Y2Y) wildlife corridor.

Map of the world showing projects on every continent.

Movebank now houses 6.5 billion animal locations. Markers represent projects managed by 4,300 users worldwide. (Image credit: Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior)

A wildlife corridor is a passageway or connected strip of natural, protected land that enables animals to move between areas of suitable habitat that human development might otherwise fragment. Wildlife corridors provide safe migration routes for animals where they can find food, and shelter, while moving between feeding and breeding sites.

The Y2Y wildlife corridor, one of the largest in the world, extends more than 2,100 miles from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem in the western United States to the Arctic Circle in the Yukon Territory of Canada. According to the Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative, the area spans five American states, two Canadian provinces, two Canadian territories, and at least 75 Indigenous territories. The expanse contains mountain, forest, and grassland ecosystems that support grizzly bears, caribou, wolves, and numerous bird species, including the golden eagle.

Room2Roam animal tracking data lives on Movebank, a global platform for hosting and accessing animal movement data gathered from animal-attached sensors. Launched in 2008 by the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, and the University of Konstanz, the Movebank site ​​now contains over 6 billion locations worldwide. Over 4,300 participants contribute data.

Historically, funded projects have focused on academic outputs such as research papers. Room2Room, on the other hand, prioritizes the needs of practitioners, according to Davidson, who is also the data curator for Movebank and the coordinator of Room2Roam.

This new approach has resulted in Room2Roam directly involving end users. At their first user meeting, Bohrer and Room2Roam project leaders met with almost 40 representatives from agencies and conservation groups working in the wildlife corridor to gather feedback for developing tools for the region. One of the top requests? Visualization.

Map of Canada and the United States that highlights the Yellowstone-to-Yukon (Y2Y) migration corridor and shows animal tracking data within the corridor.

The Yellowstone to Yukon wildlife corridor extends more than 2,100 miles from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem in the western United States to the Arctic Circle in the Yukon Territory of Canada. (Image credit: Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior)

“Everybody wanted animations for their data,” Bohrer says.

Building the Tool

Bohrer had been using MATLAB® to create visualizations for his work. He approached MathWorks to fund and collaborate on the Room2Roam project, knowing MATLAB was up to the challenge. “We needed the computational force of MATLAB to handle the large amount of animal movement and remote sensing data,” he says.

“We needed the computational force of MATLAB to handle the large amount of animal movement and remote sensing data."

Two years later, Room2Roam launched ECODATA-Animate. Built with MATLAB, the app enables researchers to create customized animations of animal movements superimposed on geographic maps and dynamic environmental observations. The app runs without a MATLAB license and offline, enabling researchers to run it on their laptops, including in remote locations without internet access.

Bohrer, Missik, and Davidson designed ECODATA-Animate with MATLAB App Designer and Mapping Toolbox™. To visualize wildlife scenes, the app uses four main data types: geographic, animal movement, environmental, and location details, such as roads and names. It can also include user-provided maps in GIS format—like maps of planned future development, for example. MATLAB combines these multiple data layers into a single integrated map.

“That was a big advantage,” Bohrer says. “Most other tools don’t do that because it’s nontrivial. MATLAB lets you handle it very easily.”

Video length is 0:43

ECODATA-Animate map of animal movements over a one-year period. (Video credit: The Ohio State University)

Researchers and wildlife managers were eager to do more with their data than create static maps, but creating a video or animation based on the data is often difficult for researchers without a strong coding background.

But thanks to the ECODATA-Animate graphical user interface, researchers can easily create vivid animations of animal movements in minutes or hours. Researchers at the Room2Roam end-user workshop were amazed at how quickly they could turn the data into easily understood animations.

“At the end of the first day, one participant approached the organizers and said, ‘I just made this movie of the woods that I’ve been studying for 20 years,’” Bohrer says.

The Data Comes to Life

ECODATA-Animate benefits animal researchers, park services, wildlife managers, land managers, and other stakeholders monitoring animal movements and habitats. Government agencies, such as transportation, health, and agriculture, also have a vested interest in tracking animal movement.

“We are using an open science approach to develop and share these tools. This lets us accelerate information exchange for applied and scientific uses.”

In the Northwest Territory, researchers used a multispecies animation to illustrate how different wildlife respond to roads. Caribou shy away, potentially fragmenting populations, while bison follow the routes, increasing vehicle collision risks.

“The road affects both species, but in totally different ways,” Bohrer says.

The animations can help these diverse stakeholders better understand and communicate the behavior patterns and sustainability requirements of different species.

“Being able to watch a one-minute movie can make the difference in whether people understand the need to build a wildlife overpass or not,” Davidson says.

Screenshot of the ECODATA-Animate user interface shows you can adjust the selected individuals, time range, or geographic location.

The user-friendly ECODATA-Animate interface for uploading and animating animal tracking data. Uploaded tracking data will automatically populate the contents of the fields, and they can be updated to refine what to include in the animation. (Image credit: The Ohio State University)

Screenshot of the ECODATA-Animate app on MATLAB File Exchange.

Professor Bohrer shared the ECODATA-Animate app and code on GitHub and MATLAB File Exchange.

Once the Roam2Roam team built the tool, another goal of the NASA grant was to offer these tools to groups and researchers working with animal data across the world. While still in its early days, the reach of ECODATA-Animate is rapidly expanding since Bohrer shared the app and the code behind it on GitHub® and MATLAB File Exchange.

“We are using an open science approach to develop and share these tools,” explains Davidson. “This lets us accelerate information exchange for applied and scientific uses.”

As a result of strong interest, Room2Roam team members have given more than 30 presentations and workshops to communities of researchers and practitioners wanting to learn more about using the tools. That includes some people in the Algonquin to Adirondacks (A2A) Collaborative, a group similar to Y2Y. A2A protects a wildlife corridor that stretches over 40,000 square miles across the eastern United States and Canada.

Bohrer sees additional applications for ECODATA-Animate. He hopes to add support for additional types of observational data, such as eBird, a crowdsourced database of bird sightings run by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. He also wants to create a split-screen animation for location-based data types, such as camera traps, letting a user click on a data point from a camera trap and see a video of the camera burst on one screen, and a map of data from all camera locations on the other. He plans to use MATLAB tools, such as Wavelet Toolbox™, to expand the types of analyses that are applied to animal movement data.

A Detailed Global View

Bohrer once heard someone from NASA explain that you can observe nothing about everywhere or everything about nowhere. In other words, most researchers confine their observations to tiny regions, while some larger-scale efforts, such as satellites, take a broader but coarser look at the whole planet. Combining the two scales could reveal new insights into our world.

“We need to somehow combine all those point observations into a global picture,” Bohrer says. “And without open data sharing, that will never happen.”

By lowering barriers to data processing, synthesis, and sharing through the use of common data and tools, ECODATA-Animate helps unlock an era of data-driven insights into animal movement and environmental change on a global scale.

One motivation for more sharing of animal behavior data is that it’s an enormous effort to tag and track animals—jumping out of helicopters to collar caribou, for example. Often, hard-won data languishes on researchers’ laptops or some locked-down repository.

To counter this, Bohrer, Missik, and Davidson have ensured that the ECODATA tools are free and open-source but using them does not require revealing sensitive movement data to anyone else. By lowering barriers to data processing, synthesis, and sharing through the use of common data and tools, ECODATA-Animate helps unlock an era of data-driven insights into animal movement and environmental change on a global scale. These insights can be published.

“If data doesn’t exist in open archives 50 years from now, it will be lost, along with our chance to understand the world holistically,” Bohrer says.


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