Ramsey David S L, Barclay Candida, Campbell Catriona D, Dewar Elise, MacDonald Anna J, Modave Elodie, Quasim Sumaiya, Sarre Stephen D
Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning Arthur Rylah Institute Heidelberg VIC Australia.
School of Biological Sciences University of Adelaide Adelaide SA Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2017 Dec 5;8(1):732-743. doi: 10.1002/ece3.3694. eCollection 2018 Jan.
The ability to detect the incursion of an invasive species or destroy the last individuals during an eradication program are some of the most difficult aspects of invasive species management. The presence of foxes in Tasmania is a contentious issue with recent structured monitoring efforts, involving collection of carnivore scats and testing for fox DNA, failing to detect any evidence of foxes. Understanding the likelihood that monitoring efforts would detect fox presence, given at least one is present, is therefore critical for understanding the role of scat monitoring for informing the response to an incursion. We undertook trials to estimate the probability of fox scat detection through monitoring by scat-detector dogs and person searches and used this information to critically evaluate the power of scat monitoring efforts for detecting foxes in the Tasmanian landscape. The probability of detecting a single scat present in a 1-km survey unit was highest for scat-detector dogs searches (0.053) compared with person searches (x¯≅0.015) for each 10 km of search effort. Simulation of the power of recent scat monitoring efforts undertaken in Tasmania from 2011 to 2015 suggested that single foxes would have to be present in at least 20 different locations or fox breeding groups present in at least six different locations, in order to be detected with a high level of confidence (>0.80). We have shown that highly structured detection trials can provide managers with the quantitative tools needed to make judgments about the power of large-scale scat monitoring programs. Results suggest that a fox population, if present in Tasmania, could remain undetected by a large-scale, structured scat monitoring program. Therefore, it is likely that other forms of surveillance, in conjunction with scat monitoring, will be necessary to demonstrate that foxes are absent from Tasmania with high confidence.
在入侵物种管理中,最难的部分之一是在根除计划期间检测入侵物种的侵入或消灭最后一批个体。塔斯马尼亚岛狐狸的存在是一个有争议的问题,最近进行的结构化监测工作,包括收集食肉动物粪便并检测狐狸DNA,但未能发现任何狐狸存在的证据。因此,了解监测工作在至少有一只狐狸存在的情况下检测到狐狸的可能性,对于理解粪便监测在通报入侵应对措施方面的作用至关重要。我们进行了试验,以估计通过粪便探测犬监测和人工搜索来检测狐狸粪便的概率,并利用这些信息严格评估在塔斯马尼亚岛景观中进行粪便监测以检测狐狸的效力。对于每10公里的搜索工作量,粪便探测犬搜索在1公里调查单元中检测到单个粪便的概率最高(0.053),而人工搜索的概率约为0.015。对2011年至2015年在塔斯马尼亚进行的近期粪便监测工作效力的模拟表明,为了以高置信度(>0.80)检测到狐狸,单只狐狸必须至少出现在20个不同地点,或者狐狸繁殖群体必须至少出现在6个不同地点。我们已经表明,高度结构化的检测试验可以为管理人员提供所需的定量工具,以便对大规模粪便监测计划的效力做出判断。结果表明,如果塔斯马尼亚岛存在狐狸种群,大规模的结构化粪便监测计划可能无法检测到。因此,可能需要结合其他形式的监测与粪便监测,才能高置信度地证明塔斯马尼亚岛没有狐狸。