One of the world's longest migrations of zebras occurs in the African
nation of Botswana, but predicting when and where zebras will move has
not been possible until now. Using NASA rain and vegetation data,
researchers can track when and where arid lands begin to green, and for
the first time anticipate if zebras will make the trek or, if the
animals find poor conditions en route, understand why they will turn
back.
Researchers
used cues gleaned from GPS tracking of the zebras and satellite data to
predict when the zebras will be on the move, a powerful tool for
conservation.
Image Credit:
NASA
Covering an area of approximately 8,500 square miles (22,000 square
kilometers), Botswana’s Okavango Delta is one end of the second-longest
zebra migration on Earth, a 360-mile (580-kilometer) round trip to the
Makgadikgadi Salt Pans—the largest salt pan system on the planet. Zebras
walk an unmarked route that takes them to the next best place for
grazing, while overhead thundering cloudbursts of late October rains
drive new plant growth, filling pockmarks across this largest inland
delta in the world. In a matter of weeks, the flooded landscape could
yield ecosystems flush with forage for the muscled movers.
High above, Earth-orbiting satellites capture images of the zebras'
movements on this epic trek, as well as the daily change in
environmental conditions. Zebras don’t need data to know when it’s time
to find better forage: The surge of rain-coaxed grasses greening is
their prompt to depart. But now, researchers are able to take that data
and predict when the zebras will move.
Pieter Beck, research associate with the Woods Hole Research Center
in Falmouth, Mass., and three collaborators studied animal migration in a
novel way, which they described in a paper published in the Journal of
Geophysical Research--Biogeoscences, a publication of the American
Geophysical Union. While tracking animal movement with satellites has
been accomplished many times, Beck said, he and his team combined that
information with in-depth use of environmental satellite data, using a
series of images of vegetation growth and rainfall taken over days and
weeks. This sheds unprecedented light on what drives animals to migrate,
he said, what cues they use, and how animal migrations respond to
environmental change.
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