Automated Author Profile

Holland, Kim

Current S-Index

1.0

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

0.3

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

3

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

14.1%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

0

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

Additional file 4 of Effects of habitat modifications on the movement behavior of animals: the case study of Fish Aggregating Devices (FADs) and tropical tunas

Additional file 4. Random-walk model.

Authors

  • Pérez, Géraldine ;
  • Dagorn, Laurent ;
  • Jean-Louis Deneubourg ;
  • Forget, Fabien ;
  • Filmalter, John D. ;
  • Holland, Kim ;
  • Itano, David ;
  • Shiham Adam ;
  • Riyaz Jauharee ;
  • Beeharry, Sunil P. ;
  • Capello, Manuela
0 Citations0 Mentions13% FAIR0.3 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.13219322.v1January 2020

Additional file 4 of Effects of habitat modifications on the movement behavior of animals: the case study of Fish Aggregating Devices (FADs) and tropical tunas

Additional file 4. Random-walk model.

Authors

  • Pérez, Géraldine ;
  • Dagorn, Laurent ;
  • Jean-Louis Deneubourg ;
  • Forget, Fabien ;
  • Filmalter, John D. ;
  • Holland, Kim ;
  • Itano, David ;
  • Shiham Adam ;
  • Riyaz Jauharee ;
  • Beeharry, Sunil P. ;
  • Capello, Manuela
0 Citations0 Mentions13% FAIR0.3 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.13219322January 2020

acoustic

Although a growing body of evidence has indicated that tuna can thermoregulate and have body temperatures that are decoupled from immediate changes in ambient temperature, demonstrating the extend and time-course of body temperature changes in tuna moving through theri natural environments had proved to be elusive. Here we use body temperature data telemetered from free-swimming fish to demonstrate short-latency physiological thermoregulation in bigeye tuna. We used a recently developmed modeling system to determine the magnitude and time-course of the whole-body thermal conductivity changes that would result in body temperature changes observed in fish in the wild. The results indicate rapid, 100 to 1000-fold changes in whole-body thermal conductivity that occur in response to quickly changing ambient temperatures. Coupling this physiological response with behavioral thermoregulation expands the forage space of these animals by permitting acivity in wide ranges of water temperatures and depths.

Authors

  • University Of Hawaii At Manoa ;
  • Holland, Kim
0 Citations0 Mentions15% FAIR0.4 Dataset Index
10.5063/aa/knb.62.1January 2004