Thomas Morgan L, Baker Lynn, Beattie James R, Baker Andrew M
School of Earth, Environmental and Biological Sciences Science and Engineering Faculty Queensland University of Technology Brisbane Qld Australia.
Canines for Wildlife Brierfield NSW Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Jan 8;10(2):1054-1068. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5972. eCollection 2020 Jan.
Metal box (e.g., Elliott, Sherman) traps and remote cameras are two of the most commonly employed methods presently used to survey terrestrial mammals. However, their relative efficacy at accurately detecting cryptic small mammals has not been adequately assessed. The present study therefore compared the effectiveness of metal box (Elliott) traps and vertically oriented, close range, white flash camera traps in detecting small mammals occurring in the Scenic Rim of eastern Australia. We also conducted a preliminary survey to determine effectiveness of a conservation detection dog (CDD) for identifying presence of a threatened carnivorous marsupial, , in present-day and historical locations, using camera traps to corroborate detections. 200 Elliott traps and 20 white flash camera traps were set for four deployments per method, across a site where the target small mammals, including , are known to occur. Camera traps produced higher detection probabilities than Elliott traps for all four species. Thus, vertically mounted white flash cameras were preferable for detecting the presence of cryptic small mammals in our survey. The CDD, which had been trained to detect scat, indicated in total 31 times when deployed in the field survey area, with subsequent camera trap deployments specifically corroborating presence at 100% (3) indication locations. Importantly, the dog indicated twice within Border Ranges National Park, where historical (1980s-1990s) specimen-based records indicate the species was present, but extensive Elliott and camera trapping over the last 5-10 years have resulted in zero captures. Camera traps subsequently corroborated presence at these sites. This demonstrates that detection dogs can be a highly effective means of locating threatened, cryptic species, especially when traditional methods are unable to detect low-density mammal populations.
金属箱式陷阱(如埃利奥特陷阱、谢尔曼陷阱)和远程摄像机是目前用于调查陆生哺乳动物的两种最常用方法。然而,它们在准确检测隐秘小型哺乳动物方面的相对有效性尚未得到充分评估。因此,本研究比较了金属箱式(埃利奥特)陷阱和垂直放置、近距离、白色闪光的摄像机陷阱在检测澳大利亚东部风景环区出现的小型哺乳动物方面的有效性。我们还进行了一项初步调查,以确定保护探测犬(CDD)在现今和历史地点识别一种濒危食肉有袋动物——的存在的有效性,并使用摄像机陷阱来证实探测结果。在一个已知有包括在内的目标小型哺乳动物出现的地点,每种方法设置了200个埃利奥特陷阱和20个白色闪光摄像机陷阱,每种方法进行四次部署。对于所有四个物种,摄像机陷阱产生的检测概率都高于埃利奥特陷阱。因此,在我们的调查中,垂直安装的白色闪光摄像机更适合检测隐秘小型哺乳动物的存在。经过训练以检测粪便的保护探测犬在实地调查区域部署时总共指示了31次,随后的摄像机陷阱部署在100%(3个)指示位置特别证实了的存在。重要的是,这只狗在边境山脉国家公园内指示了两次,基于标本的历史记录(20世纪80年代至90年代)表明该物种曾在该公园出现,但在过去5至10年中,广泛使用埃利奥特陷阱和摄像机陷阱都未捕获到。随后摄像机陷阱在这些地点证实了的存在。这表明探测犬可以是定位濒危隐秘物种的一种非常有效的手段,特别是当传统方法无法检测到低密度哺乳动物种群时。