Passive acoustic monitoring for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial.

Passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) is increasingly being used for the survey of vocalising wildlife species that are otherwise cryptic and difficult to survey. Our study aimed to develop PAM guidelines for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial that occurs in native Eu...

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Main Authors: Desley A Whisson, Freya McKinnon, Matthew Lefoe, Anthony R Rendall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252092
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spelling doaj-9cbed7d384c24b629b4880a2b1625ba12021-06-10T04:33:07ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01165e025209210.1371/journal.pone.0252092Passive acoustic monitoring for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial.Desley A WhissonFreya McKinnonMatthew LefoeAnthony R RendallPassive acoustic monitoring (PAM) is increasingly being used for the survey of vocalising wildlife species that are otherwise cryptic and difficult to survey. Our study aimed to develop PAM guidelines for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial that occurs in native Eucalyptus forests in eastern and south-eastern Australia. To achieve this, we considered the influence of background noise, weather conditions, lunar illumination, time since sunset and season on the probability of detecting vocalisations. We deployed Autonomous Recording Units (ARUs) at 43 sites in the Central Highlands of Victoria during two periods: spring/summer (October 2018 to January 2019), and autumn/winter (May to August 2019). ARUs were programmed to record for 11 hours from sunset for 14 consecutive days during each period. Background noise resulted from inclement weather (wind and rain) and masked vocalisations in spectrograms of the recordings, thus having the greatest influence on detection probability. Vocalisations were most common in the four hours after sunset. Rainfall negatively influenced detection probability, especially during the autumn/winter sampling period. Detection of Yellow-bellied Gliders with PAM requires deploying ARUs programmed to record for four hours after sunset, for a minimum of six nights with minimal inclement weather (light or no wind or rain). The survey period should be extended to 12 nights when rain or wind are forecast. Because PAM is less labour intensive than active surveys (i.e., spotlighting and call playbacks with multiple observers and several nights' survey per site), its use will facilitate broad-scale surveys for Yellow-bellied Gliders.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252092
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Desley A Whisson
Freya McKinnon
Matthew Lefoe
Anthony R Rendall
spellingShingle Desley A Whisson
Freya McKinnon
Matthew Lefoe
Anthony R Rendall
Passive acoustic monitoring for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Desley A Whisson
Freya McKinnon
Matthew Lefoe
Anthony R Rendall
author_sort Desley A Whisson
title Passive acoustic monitoring for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial.
title_short Passive acoustic monitoring for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial.
title_full Passive acoustic monitoring for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial.
title_fullStr Passive acoustic monitoring for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial.
title_full_unstemmed Passive acoustic monitoring for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial.
title_sort passive acoustic monitoring for detecting the yellow-bellied glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) is increasingly being used for the survey of vocalising wildlife species that are otherwise cryptic and difficult to survey. Our study aimed to develop PAM guidelines for detecting the Yellow-bellied Glider, a highly vocal arboreal marsupial that occurs in native Eucalyptus forests in eastern and south-eastern Australia. To achieve this, we considered the influence of background noise, weather conditions, lunar illumination, time since sunset and season on the probability of detecting vocalisations. We deployed Autonomous Recording Units (ARUs) at 43 sites in the Central Highlands of Victoria during two periods: spring/summer (October 2018 to January 2019), and autumn/winter (May to August 2019). ARUs were programmed to record for 11 hours from sunset for 14 consecutive days during each period. Background noise resulted from inclement weather (wind and rain) and masked vocalisations in spectrograms of the recordings, thus having the greatest influence on detection probability. Vocalisations were most common in the four hours after sunset. Rainfall negatively influenced detection probability, especially during the autumn/winter sampling period. Detection of Yellow-bellied Gliders with PAM requires deploying ARUs programmed to record for four hours after sunset, for a minimum of six nights with minimal inclement weather (light or no wind or rain). The survey period should be extended to 12 nights when rain or wind are forecast. Because PAM is less labour intensive than active surveys (i.e., spotlighting and call playbacks with multiple observers and several nights' survey per site), its use will facilitate broad-scale surveys for Yellow-bellied Gliders.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252092
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