Using simulation to evaluate wildlife survey designs: polar bears and seals in the Chukchi Sea

Logistically demanding and expensive wildlife surveys should ideally yield defensible estimates. Here, we show how simulation can be used to evaluate alternative survey designs for estimating wildlife abundance. Specifically, we evaluate the potential of instrument-based aerial surveys (combining in...

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Main Authors: Paul B. Conn, Erin E. Moreland, Eric V. Regehr, Erin L. Richmond, Michael F. Cameron, Peter L. Boveng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2016-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150561
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spelling doaj-b8038126da78457c851459b543db89352020-11-25T04:06:04ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032016-01-013110.1098/rsos.150561150561Using simulation to evaluate wildlife survey designs: polar bears and seals in the Chukchi SeaPaul B. ConnErin E. MorelandEric V. RegehrErin L. RichmondMichael F. CameronPeter L. BovengLogistically demanding and expensive wildlife surveys should ideally yield defensible estimates. Here, we show how simulation can be used to evaluate alternative survey designs for estimating wildlife abundance. Specifically, we evaluate the potential of instrument-based aerial surveys (combining infrared imagery with high-resolution digital photography to detect and identify species) for estimating abundance of polar bears and seals in the Chukchi Sea. We investigate the consequences of different levels of survey effort, flight track allocation and model configuration on bias and precision of abundance estimators. For bearded seals (0.07 animals km−2) and ringed seals (1.29 animals km−2), we find that eight flights traversing ≈7840 km are sufficient to achieve target precision levels (coefficient of variation (CV)<20%) for a 2.94×105 km2 study area. For polar bears (provisionally, 0.003 animals km−2), 12 flights traversing ≈11 760 km resulted in CVs ranging from 28 to 35%. Estimators were relatively unbiased with similar precision over different flight track allocation strategies and estimation models, although some combinations had superior performance. These findings suggest that instrument-based aerial surveys may provide a viable means for monitoring seal and polar bear populations on the surface of the sea ice over large Arctic regions. More broadly, our simulation-based approach to evaluating survey designs can serve as a template for biologists designing their own surveys.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150561aerial surveyanimal abundanceice-associated sealpolar bearspecies distribution modelsurvey design
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul B. Conn
Erin E. Moreland
Eric V. Regehr
Erin L. Richmond
Michael F. Cameron
Peter L. Boveng
spellingShingle Paul B. Conn
Erin E. Moreland
Eric V. Regehr
Erin L. Richmond
Michael F. Cameron
Peter L. Boveng
Using simulation to evaluate wildlife survey designs: polar bears and seals in the Chukchi Sea
Royal Society Open Science
aerial survey
animal abundance
ice-associated seal
polar bear
species distribution model
survey design
author_facet Paul B. Conn
Erin E. Moreland
Eric V. Regehr
Erin L. Richmond
Michael F. Cameron
Peter L. Boveng
author_sort Paul B. Conn
title Using simulation to evaluate wildlife survey designs: polar bears and seals in the Chukchi Sea
title_short Using simulation to evaluate wildlife survey designs: polar bears and seals in the Chukchi Sea
title_full Using simulation to evaluate wildlife survey designs: polar bears and seals in the Chukchi Sea
title_fullStr Using simulation to evaluate wildlife survey designs: polar bears and seals in the Chukchi Sea
title_full_unstemmed Using simulation to evaluate wildlife survey designs: polar bears and seals in the Chukchi Sea
title_sort using simulation to evaluate wildlife survey designs: polar bears and seals in the chukchi sea
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Logistically demanding and expensive wildlife surveys should ideally yield defensible estimates. Here, we show how simulation can be used to evaluate alternative survey designs for estimating wildlife abundance. Specifically, we evaluate the potential of instrument-based aerial surveys (combining infrared imagery with high-resolution digital photography to detect and identify species) for estimating abundance of polar bears and seals in the Chukchi Sea. We investigate the consequences of different levels of survey effort, flight track allocation and model configuration on bias and precision of abundance estimators. For bearded seals (0.07 animals km−2) and ringed seals (1.29 animals km−2), we find that eight flights traversing ≈7840 km are sufficient to achieve target precision levels (coefficient of variation (CV)<20%) for a 2.94×105 km2 study area. For polar bears (provisionally, 0.003 animals km−2), 12 flights traversing ≈11 760 km resulted in CVs ranging from 28 to 35%. Estimators were relatively unbiased with similar precision over different flight track allocation strategies and estimation models, although some combinations had superior performance. These findings suggest that instrument-based aerial surveys may provide a viable means for monitoring seal and polar bear populations on the surface of the sea ice over large Arctic regions. More broadly, our simulation-based approach to evaluating survey designs can serve as a template for biologists designing their own surveys.
topic aerial survey
animal abundance
ice-associated seal
polar bear
species distribution model
survey design
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150561
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