1. Counting giraffes: A comparison of abundance estimators on the Ongava Game Reserve, Namibia.
- Author
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BONENFANT, Christophe, STRATFORD, Ken, and PÉRIQUET, Stéphanie
- Subjects
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GIRAFFES , *WILDLIFE conservation , *COUNTING - Abstract
Camera-traps are a versatile and widely adopted tool for collecting biological data for wildlife conservation and management. While estimating population abundance from camera-trap data is the primarily goal of many projects, the question of which population estimator is suitable for analysing these data needs to be investigated. We took advantage of a 21 day camera-trap monitoring period of giraffes (Giraffa camelopardalis angolensis) on the Ongava Game Reserve (Namibia) to compare capture-recapture (CR), rarefaction curves and N-mixture estimators of population abundance. A marked variation in detection probability of giraffes was observed both in time and between individuals, with a skewed occurrence of animals at some waterholes. The mean daily visit frequency of waterholes by giraffes was f = 0.25 although they were less likely to be detected after they were seen at a waterhole. We estimated the population size to be 104 giraffes (Cv = 0.02) using the most robust reference estimator (CR). All other estimators deviated from the CR population size by ca. -16 to > +106%. This was due the fact that these models did not account for the temporal and individual variations in detection probability. We found that modelling choice was much less forgiving for N-mixture models than CR estimators because the former leads to very variable and inconsistent estimations of abundance. Double counts were problematic for N-mixture models, challenging the use of raw counts (i.e. when individuals are not identified), to monitor the abundance of giraffes or of other species without idiosyncratic coat patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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