An empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimations

Abstract The simultaneous development of technology (e.g. camera traps) and statistical methods, particularly spatially capture–recapture (SCR), has improved monitoring of large mammals in recent years. SCR estimates are known to be sensitive to sampling design, yet existing recommendations about tr...

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Main Authors: Muhammad Ali Nawaz, Barkat Ullah Khan, Amer Mahmood, Muhammad Younas, Jaffar ud Din, Chris Sutherland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-06-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-92361-2
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spelling doaj-7f8c4fcd1a754f6d959e88ce27e4705c2021-06-27T11:31:13ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-06-011111910.1038/s41598-021-92361-2An empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimationsMuhammad Ali Nawaz0Barkat Ullah Khan1Amer Mahmood2Muhammad Younas3Jaffar ud Din4Chris Sutherland5Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Qatar UniversityDepartment of Zoology, Quaid-i-Azam UniversityDepartment of Zoology, Quaid-i-Azam UniversitySnow Leopard FoundationSnow Leopard FoundationDepartment of Environmental Conservation, University of MassachusettsAbstract The simultaneous development of technology (e.g. camera traps) and statistical methods, particularly spatially capture–recapture (SCR), has improved monitoring of large mammals in recent years. SCR estimates are known to be sensitive to sampling design, yet existing recommendations about trap spacing and coverage are often not achieved, particularly for sampling wide-ranging and rare species in landscapes that allow for limited accessibility. Consequently, most camera trap studies on large wide-ranging carnivores relies on convenience or judgmental sampling, and often yields compromised results. This study attempts to highlight the importance of carefully considered sampling design for large carnivores that, because of low densities and elusive behavior, are challenging to monitor. As a motivating example, we use two years of snow leopard camera trapping data from the same areas in the high mountains of Pakistan but with vastly different camera configurations, to demonstrate that estimates of density and space use are indeed sensitive to the trapping array. A compact design, one in which cameras were placed much closer together than generally recommended and therefore have lower spatial coverage, resulted in fewer individuals observed, but more recaptures, and estimates of density and space use were inconsistent with expectations for the region. In contrast, a diffuse design, one with larger spacing and spatial coverage and more consistent with general recommendations, detected more individuals, had fewer recaptures, but generated estimates of density and space use that were in line with expectations. Researchers often opt for compact camera configurations while monitoring wide-ranging and rare species, in an attempt to maximize the encounter probabilities. We empirically demonstrate the potential for biases when sampling a small area approximately the size of a single home range—this arises from exposing fewer individuals than deemed sufficient for estimation. The smaller trapping array may also underestimate density by significantly inflating $$\sigma$$ σ . On the other hand, larger trapping array with fewer detectors and poor design induces uncertainties in the estimates. We conclude that existing design recommendations have limited utility on practical grounds for devising feasible sampling designs for large ranging species, and more research on SCR designs is required that allows for integrating biological and habitat traits of large carnivores in sampling framework. We also suggest that caution should be exercised when there is a reliance on convenience sampling.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-92361-2
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammad Ali Nawaz
Barkat Ullah Khan
Amer Mahmood
Muhammad Younas
Jaffar ud Din
Chris Sutherland
spellingShingle Muhammad Ali Nawaz
Barkat Ullah Khan
Amer Mahmood
Muhammad Younas
Jaffar ud Din
Chris Sutherland
An empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimations
Scientific Reports
author_facet Muhammad Ali Nawaz
Barkat Ullah Khan
Amer Mahmood
Muhammad Younas
Jaffar ud Din
Chris Sutherland
author_sort Muhammad Ali Nawaz
title An empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimations
title_short An empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimations
title_full An empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimations
title_fullStr An empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimations
title_full_unstemmed An empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimations
title_sort empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimations
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract The simultaneous development of technology (e.g. camera traps) and statistical methods, particularly spatially capture–recapture (SCR), has improved monitoring of large mammals in recent years. SCR estimates are known to be sensitive to sampling design, yet existing recommendations about trap spacing and coverage are often not achieved, particularly for sampling wide-ranging and rare species in landscapes that allow for limited accessibility. Consequently, most camera trap studies on large wide-ranging carnivores relies on convenience or judgmental sampling, and often yields compromised results. This study attempts to highlight the importance of carefully considered sampling design for large carnivores that, because of low densities and elusive behavior, are challenging to monitor. As a motivating example, we use two years of snow leopard camera trapping data from the same areas in the high mountains of Pakistan but with vastly different camera configurations, to demonstrate that estimates of density and space use are indeed sensitive to the trapping array. A compact design, one in which cameras were placed much closer together than generally recommended and therefore have lower spatial coverage, resulted in fewer individuals observed, but more recaptures, and estimates of density and space use were inconsistent with expectations for the region. In contrast, a diffuse design, one with larger spacing and spatial coverage and more consistent with general recommendations, detected more individuals, had fewer recaptures, but generated estimates of density and space use that were in line with expectations. Researchers often opt for compact camera configurations while monitoring wide-ranging and rare species, in an attempt to maximize the encounter probabilities. We empirically demonstrate the potential for biases when sampling a small area approximately the size of a single home range—this arises from exposing fewer individuals than deemed sufficient for estimation. The smaller trapping array may also underestimate density by significantly inflating $$\sigma$$ σ . On the other hand, larger trapping array with fewer detectors and poor design induces uncertainties in the estimates. We conclude that existing design recommendations have limited utility on practical grounds for devising feasible sampling designs for large ranging species, and more research on SCR designs is required that allows for integrating biological and habitat traits of large carnivores in sampling framework. We also suggest that caution should be exercised when there is a reliance on convenience sampling.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-92361-2
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