Rueda-Uribe, CristinaSargent, Alyssa J.Echeverry-Galvis, María ÁngelaCamargo-Martínez, Pedro A.Capellini, IsabellaLancaster, Lesley T.Rico-Guevara, AlejandroTravis, Justin M. J.2024-10-292024-10-292024-10Rueda-Uribe, C, Sargent, A J, Echeverry-Galvis, M Á, Camargo-Martínez, P A, Capellini, I, Lancaster, L T, Rico-Guevara, A & Travis, J M J 2024, 'Tracking Small Animals in Complex Landscapes : A Comparison of Localisation Workflows for Automated Radio Telemetry Systems', Ecology and Evolution, vol. 14, no. 10, e70405. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.04.14.589351, https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.704052045-7758https://hdl.handle.net/2164/24506We are grateful to all students, park rangers, and volunteers that supported and participated in fieldwork. They braved through the extreme weather of the paramo and a muddy valley with challenging slopes and prickly vegetation, carrying heavy equipment and doing intense physical work. We are particularly thankful to Juan Pablo Ríos, Manuela Lozano, Jonathan Espitia, Sarah Chaves, Angie Rodríguez, Ana Melisa Fernandes, Miguel Ángel Muñoz-Amaya, Aaron Skinner, Daniel Mancera, Fredy García, Luisa Díaz, Ángela María Uribe, Alfonso Rueda, Adriana Rueda, Diego Rueda, Michael Spence and Santiago Cepeda. We also thank our drone pilots, Nicolás Skillings and Carolina Arévalo, Jessie Williamson for sharing experiences in hummingbird tracking and research, Luis Guillermo Linares for giving initial advice and support, Leonel Herrera-Alsina for help running code on the cluster, Stephen Palmer, Rebekka Allgayer and Tamsin Woodman for suggestions on the methods, David Sragli, Rufus Behr and Alice Scarpa for initial coding approaches, Chingaza National Natural Park staff and management, especially Juan Camilo Bonilla-C., for all the support in the field, and Premium 3D for designing a tag chassis specifically suited for hummingbirds. NERC, Rufford Foundation, University of Washington Department of Biology, and School of Biological Sciences University of Aberdeen funded this work and we are grateful for their support.1510890879engAndesColombiahummingbirdsmovement ecologymultilaterationparamostate-space modelsTrochilidaeQH301 BiologySupplementary Informationhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/action/downloadSupplement?doi=10.1002%2Fece3.70405&file=ece370405-sup-0001-DataS1.zipQH301Tracking Small Animals in Complex Landscapes : A Comparison of Localisation Workflows for Automated Radio Telemetry SystemsJournal article10.1101/2024.04.14.5893511410