A method for tracking the movement and position of mobile agents using
light detection and ranging (LIDAR) as a stand-off optical detection
technique. The positions of the agents are tracked by analyzing the
time-history of a series of optical measurements made over the field of
view of the optical system. This provides a (time+3-D) or (time+2-D)
mapping of the location of the mobile agents. Repeated pulses of a laser
beam impinge on a mobile agent, such as a bee, and are backscattered from
the agent into a LIDAR detection system. Alternatively, the incident
laser pulses excite fluorescence or phosphorescence from the agent, which
is detected using a LIDAR system. Analysis of the spatial location of
signals from the agents produced by repeated pulses generates a
multidimensional map of agent location.