- Smithsonian Institution, Front Royal, VA, United States of America (uiterwaals@si.edu)
- *A full list of authors appears at the end of the abstract
Movement is essential to life and biodiversity, enabling animals to access resources and avoid risks, underlying species interactions and population dynamics, and facilitating gene flow and various ecosystem services. As such, while movement is a recognized Essential Biodiversity Variable in the class of species’ traits, it also scales up from individual responses to interactions and ecosystem functions. Yet, among the current biodiversity indicators, which provide standardized methods for monitoring biodiversity change under anthropogenic impacts, only one integrates movement data (the Protected Area Isolation Index). Here, we evaluate animal movement metrics for their potential as informative biodiversity indicators. To do so, we assess whether fifteen common movement metrics - standardized calculations of movement traits and movement model parameters - have a generalizable response to human disturbance as measured by the Human Footprint Index. Our analysis uses data from ungulates across the globe: White-bearded wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus), all four giraffe species (Giraffa spp.), red deer (Cervus elaphus), mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus), Mongolian gazelle (Procapra gutturosa), and guanaco (Lama guanicoe). Of the tested metrics, individuals responded most consistently to increases in human disturbance via a shift in diurnality, a measure of the daily timing of animal movement. All species became more nocturnal in more disturbed landscapes. We therefore suggest that diurnality is a promising candidate for development into a movement-informed biodiversity indicator. Using tracking data from red deer populations monitored for 8-18 years, we then showcase how diurnality can be used to monitor ecological change over time. In particular, we demonstrate that changes in diurnality can capture the effects of management strategies or conservation interventions, a prerequisite for a biodiversity indicator. Lastly, we discuss practical considerations for implementing a movement-based biodiversity indicator like diurnality, highlighting how animal movement offers a powerful, underutilized opportunity to detect the impacts of human disturbance and to inform strategies for mitigating biodiversity loss.
Weiqian Gao, Smithsonian Institution, GaoW@si.edu Larissa Beumer, The University Centre in Svalbard, larissab@unis.no Anne Hertel, Ludwig-Maximians University of Munich, hertel@biologie.uni-muenchen.de Lacey Hughey, Smithsonian Institution, HugheyL@si.edu Thomas Mueller, Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre, thomas.mueller@senckenberg.de William McShea, Smithsonian Institution, McSheaW@si.edu Cody Aylward, World Wildlife Fund, cody.aylward@wwfus.org Michael Butler Brown, Giraffe Conservation Foundation, michael@giraffeconservation.org Francesca Cagnacci, Fondazione Edmund Mach, francesca.cagnacci@fmach.it Grant Connette, Smithsonian Institution, ConnetteG@si.edu Emiliano Danadio, Fundacion Rewilding Argentina, edonadio@rewildingargentina.org Nandia Dejid, Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre, nandintsetseg.dejid@senckenberg.de Julian Fennessy, Giraffe Conservation Foundation, julian@giraffeconservation.org John Fieberg, University of Minnesota, jfieberg@umn.edu Christian Fleming, University of Central Florida, christen.fleming@ucf.edu Kim Hall, The Nature Conservancy, kimberly.hall@tnc.org Autumn-Lynn Harrison, Smithsonian Institution, HarrisonAL@si.edu J. Grant C. Hopcraft, University of Glasgow, grant.hopcraft@glasgow.ac.uk Sarah Huebner, Smithsonian Institution, HuebnerS2@si.edu Matthew Kauffman, University of Wyoming, mkauffm1@uwyo.edu Roland Kays, North Carolina State University, roland.kays@ncsu.edu Annika Keeley, Center for Large Landscape Conservation, annika.keeley@yahoo.com Joe Kolowski, Smithsonian-Mason School for Conservation, kolowskij@si.edu Peter Leimgruber, Smithsonian Institution, LeimgruberP@si.edu Courtney Marneweck, Giraffe Conservation Foundation, courtney@giraffeconservation.org Ronaldo Morato, Panthera, rmorato@panthera.org Thomas Morrison, University of Glasgow, thomas.morrison@glasgow.ac.uk Laura Pollock, McGill University, laura.pollock@mcgill.ca Mitchell Serota, Smithsonian Institution, mserota@dorisduke.org Melissa Songer, Smithsonian Institution, SongerM@si.edu Luke Wilde, University of Wyoming, lwilde2@uwyo.edu Jared Stabach, Smithsonian Institution, StabachJ@si.edu
How to cite: Uiterwaal, S. and the Move BON Movement Metrics Team: Tracking change: Integrating animal movement into biodiversity indicators, World Biodiversity Forum 2026, Davos, Switzerland, 14–19 Jun 2026, WBF2026-473, https://doi.org/10.5194/wbf2026-473, 2026.