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Population assessment without individual identification using camera-traps: A comparison of four methods
Affiliation:1. Dipartimento di Biologia, Università Degli Studi di Firenze, 50019, Sesto, Fiorentino, Italy;2. ISC-CNR, Sesto Fiorentino 50019, Italy;3. C3A Centro Agricoltura Alimenti Ambiente, Università Degli Studi di Trento, Via Edmund Mach, 138010, San Michele all''Adige (TN), Italy;4. Istituto Superiore per la Protezione e la Ricerca Ambientale, Via Vitaliano Brancati 48, 00147, Roma, Italy;5. Biodiversity and Molecular Ecology Department, Animal Ecology Unit, Research and Innovation Centre, Fondazione Edmund Mach, 38010, San Michele all''Adige, Italy
Abstract:The use of camera traps to estimate population size when animals are not individually recognizable is gaining traction in the ecological literature, because of its applicability in population conservation and management.We estimated population size of synthetic animals with four camera trap sampling-based statistical models that do not rely on individual recognition. Using a realistic model of animal movement to generate synthetic data, we compared the random encounter model, the random encounter and staying time model, the association model and the time-to-event-model and we investigated the impact of violation of assumptions on the population size estimates.While under ideal conditions these models provide reliable population estimates, when synthetic animal movements were characterised by differences in speed (due to diverse behaviours such as locomotion, grazing and resting) none of the model provided both unbiased and precise density estimates. The random encounter model and the time-to-event-model provided precise results but tended to overestimate population size, while the random encounter and staying time model was less precise and tended to underestimate population size. Lastly, the association model was unable to provide precise results. We found that each tested model was very sensitive to the method used to estimate the range of the field-of-view of camera traps. Density estimates from both random encounter model and time-to-event-model were also very sensitive to biases in the estimate of animals’ speed. We provide guidelines on how to use these statistical models to get population size estimates that could be useful to wildlife managers and practitioners.
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