Anne E. Lacy
19 Papers
116 Citations
Anne E. Lacy is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Wireless sensor network. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 19 publications.
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Papers
Sensing through the continent: towards monitoring migratory birds using cellular sensor networks
David Anthony,William P. Bennett,Mehmet C. Vuran,Matthew B. Dwyer,Sebastian Elbaum,Anne E. Lacy,Mike Engels,Walter Wehtje +7 more
- 16 Apr 2012
TL;DR: The developed platform is designed to monitor Whooping Cranes, an endangered species that conducts an annual migration of 4,000 km between southern Texas and north-central Canada, and leads to a new class of cellular sensor networks (CSNs) for time-critical and mobile sensing applications.
Large birds travel farther in homogeneous environments
Marlee A. Tucker,Olga Alexandrou,Richard O. Bierregaard,Keith L. Bildstein,Katrin Böhning-Gaese,Chloe Bracis,John N. Brzorad,Evan R. Buechley,David Cabot,Justin M. Calabrese,Justin M. Calabrese,Carlos Carrapato,André Chiaradia,André Chiaradia,Lisa C. Davenport,Lisa C. Davenport,Lisa C. Davenport,Sarah C. Davidson,Sarah C. Davidson,Mark Desholm,Christopher R. DeSorbo,Robert Domenech,Peter Enggist,William F. Fagan,Nina Farwig,Wolfgang Fiedler,Wolfgang Fiedler,Christen H. Fleming,Christen H. Fleming,Alastair Franke,John M. Fryxell,Clara García-Ripollés,David Grémillet,David Grémillet,Larry Griffin,Roi Harel,Adam Kane,Roland Kays,Roland Kays,Erik Kleyheeg,Erik Kleyheeg,Anne E. Lacy,Scott D. LaPoint,Scott D. LaPoint,Rubén Limiñana,Pascual López-López,Alan D. Maccarone,Ugo Mellone,Elizabeth K. Mojica,Ran Nathan,Scott H. Newman,Michael J. Noonan,Michael J. Noonan,Steffen Oppel,Mark Prostor,Eileen C. Rees,Yan Ropert-Coudert,Sascha Rösner,Nir Sapir,Dana G. Schabo,Matthias Schmidt,Holger Schulz,Mitra Shariati,Adam Shreading,João P. Silva,João P. Silva,João P. Silva,Henrik Skov,Orr Spiegel,John Y. Takekawa,Claire S. Teitelbaum,Mariëlle Liduine van Toor,Vicente Urios,Javier Vidal-Mateo,Qiang Wang,Bryan D. Watts,Martin Wikelski,Martin Wikelski,Kerri Wolter,Ramūnas Žydelis,Thomas Mueller +80 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined how the distribution of resources affects the movement patterns of both large terrestrial birds (e.g., raptors, bustards and hornbills) and waterbirds (i.e., cranes, storks, ducks, geese and flamingos).
First cohort of migratory whooping cranes reintroduced to easternnorth america: the first year after release
Richard P. Urbanek,Lara E. A. Fondow,Colleen D. Satyshur,Anne E. Lacy,Sara E. Zimorski,Marianne A. Wellington +5 more
- 01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: The first cohort of Eastern migratory whooping cranes (Grus americana) were released into the wild in the US from Necedah National Wildlife Refuge (NWR), Central Wisconsin, to Chassahowitzka NWR, Gulf Coast of Florida as discussed by the authors.
Changes in the number and distribution of Greater Sandhill Cranes in the Eastern Population
TL;DR: Once nearly extirpated, the Eastern Population (EP) of Greater Sandhill Cranes (Grus canadensis tabida) has increased in number and expanded its range in breeding and wintering areas, using data from Christmas Bird Counts and Breeding Bird Surveys to delineate changes in the wintering and breeding area distributions during the period from 1966 to 2013.
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