An Analysis of Elephants' Movement Data in Sub-Saharan Africa Using Clustering
Gregory Glatzer, Prasenjit Mitra, and Johnson Kinyua

TL;DR
This paper uses clustering algorithms on elephant movement data in Sub-Saharan Africa to identify key locations of interest, incorporating temperature data to improve analysis and validate findings with satellite imagery.
Contribution
It introduces a method to integrate external temperature data into clustering analysis of animal movement, enhancing the identification of important habitats and locations of interest.
Findings
Elephants tend to cluster around water sources and human settlements.
Temperature significantly influences movement clustering.
External temperature data improves the accuracy of location identification.
Abstract
Understanding the movement of animals is crucial to conservation efforts. Past research often focuses on factors affecting movement, rather than locations of interest that animals return to or habitat. We explore the use of clustering to identify locations of interest to African Elephants in regions of Sub-Saharan Africa. Our analysis was performed using publicly available datasets for tracking African elephants at Kruger National Park (KNP), South Africa; Etosha National Park, Namibia; as well as areas in Burkina Faso and the Congo. Using the DBSCAN and KMeans clustering algorithms, we calculate clusters and centroids to simplify elephant movement data and highlight important locations of interest. Through a comparison of feature spaces with and without temperature, we show that temperature is an important feature to explain movement clustering. Recognizing the importance of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWildlife Ecology and Conservation · Wildlife-Road Interactions and Conservation · Primate Behavior and Ecology
