Weather radars provide near‐continuous recording and extensive spatial coverage, which is a valuable resource for biologists, who wish to observe and study animal movements in the aerosphere over a wide range of temporal and spatial scales. Powerful biological inferences can be garnered from radar data that have been processed primarily with the intention of understanding meteorology. However, when seeking to answer certain quantitative biological questions, e.g., those related to density of animals, assumptions made in processing radar data for meteorological purposes interfere with biological inference. In particular, values of the radar reflectivity factor ( Z ) reported by weather radars are not well suited for biological interpretation. The mathematical framework we present here allows researchers to interpret weather radar data originating from biological scatterers (bioscatterers) without relying on assumptions developed specifically for meteorological phenomena. The mathematical principles discussed are used to interpret received echo power as it relates to bioscatterers. We examine the relationships among measurement error and these bioscatter signals using a radar simulator. Our simulation results demonstrate that within 30–90 km from a radar, distances typical for observing aerial vertebrates such as birds and bats, measurement error associated with number densities of animals within the radar sampling volume are low enough to allow reasonable estimates of aerial densities for population monitoring. The framework presented for using radar echoes for quantifying biological populations observed by radar in their aerosphere habitats enhances use of radar remote‐sensing for long‐term population monitoring as well as a host of other ecological applications, such as studies on phenology, movement, and aerial behaviors.
CITATION STYLE
Chilson, P. B., Frick, W. F., Stepanian, P. M., Shipley, J. R., Kunz, T. H., & Kelly, J. F. (2012). Estimating animal densities in the aerosphere using weather radar: To Z or not to Z ? Ecosphere, 3(8), 1–19. https://doi.org/10.1890/es12-00027.1
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