References

Acknowledgments
Many thanks are owed to Brian Klinkenberg and Adam Ford for allowing me access to this data, and for the guidance in analysis along the way. Alejandro Cervantes was also a huge source of help and support in the workings of ArcMap.
References
ArcGIS
10: Environmental Systems Research Institute. ArcGIS Release 10
[software]
Redlands, California: Environmental Systems Research Institute.
Frair,
J.L., Fieberg, J. and Hebblewhite M. 2010.Resolving issues of imprecise
and habitat-biased
locations in ecological analysis using GPS telemetry data. Philosophical
Transactions of the Royal Society. B; 365, 2187–2200.
Maloity,
G.M., Rugangazi B.M. and Clemenmts, E.T. 1988. Mini Review: Physiology
of the
Dik-Dik Antelope. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology;
Vol 91A (1): 1-8.
Montgomery,
R.A., Roloff, G.J., Ver Hoef, J.M. and Millspaugh, J.J. 2010. Can We Accurately Characterize Wildlife Resource
Use
When Telemetry Data Are Imprecise? Journal
of Wildlife Management.74
(8):1917-1925.
Scheibe, E. 1999. "Madoqua kirkii." Animal Diversity Web. 27 Jan 2010. University of Michigan Museum of Zoology, Web. 29 Jan 2010.
Photo References
http://www.allzoon.com/2010/02/madoqua/
http://apture.s3.amazonaws.com/00000121e57c9f0e6bb8b885004300c0002e0016.laikipia
http://www.eisinger.net/travel/dik_dik/
http://fineartamerica.com/featured/kirks-dik-dik-joseph-g-holland/
http://images.travelpod.com/users/cankiwi
http://www.itsnature.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/kirk.jpg&imgrefurl