Monitoring the status and trends of tropical forest terrestrial vertebrate communities from camera trap data: a tool for conservation.

Reducing the loss of biodiversity is key to ensure the future well being of the planet. Indicators to measure the state of biodiversity should come from primary data that are collected using consistent field methods across several sites, longitudinal, and derived using sound statistical methods that...

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Main Authors: Jorge A Ahumada, Johanna Hurtado, Diego Lizcano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3762718?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-c2aaa95cdb244be5a0b768cdfbb67bd32020-11-25T01:56:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0189e7370710.1371/journal.pone.0073707Monitoring the status and trends of tropical forest terrestrial vertebrate communities from camera trap data: a tool for conservation.Jorge A AhumadaJohanna HurtadoDiego LizcanoReducing the loss of biodiversity is key to ensure the future well being of the planet. Indicators to measure the state of biodiversity should come from primary data that are collected using consistent field methods across several sites, longitudinal, and derived using sound statistical methods that correct for observation/detection bias. In this paper we analyze camera trap data collected between 2008 and 2012 at a site in Costa Rica (Volcan Barva transect) as part of an ongoing tropical forest global monitoring network (Tropical Ecology Assessment and Monitoring Network). We estimated occupancy dynamics for 13 species of mammals, using a hierarchical modeling approach. We calculated detection-corrected species richness and the Wildlife Picture Index, a promising new indicator derived from camera trap data that measures changes in biodiversity from the occupancy estimates of individual species. Our results show that 3 out of 13 species showed significant declines in occupancy over 5 years (lowland paca, Central American agouti, nine-banded armadillo). We hypothesize that hunting, competition and/or increased predation for paca and agouti might explain these patterns. Species richness and the Wildlife Picture Index are relatively stable at the site, but small herbivores that are hunted showed a decline in diversity of about 25%. We demonstrate the usefulness of longitudinal camera trap deployments coupled with modern statistical methods and advocate for the use of this approach in monitoring and developing global and national indicators for biodiversity change.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3762718?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jorge A Ahumada
Johanna Hurtado
Diego Lizcano
spellingShingle Jorge A Ahumada
Johanna Hurtado
Diego Lizcano
Monitoring the status and trends of tropical forest terrestrial vertebrate communities from camera trap data: a tool for conservation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jorge A Ahumada
Johanna Hurtado
Diego Lizcano
author_sort Jorge A Ahumada
title Monitoring the status and trends of tropical forest terrestrial vertebrate communities from camera trap data: a tool for conservation.
title_short Monitoring the status and trends of tropical forest terrestrial vertebrate communities from camera trap data: a tool for conservation.
title_full Monitoring the status and trends of tropical forest terrestrial vertebrate communities from camera trap data: a tool for conservation.
title_fullStr Monitoring the status and trends of tropical forest terrestrial vertebrate communities from camera trap data: a tool for conservation.
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring the status and trends of tropical forest terrestrial vertebrate communities from camera trap data: a tool for conservation.
title_sort monitoring the status and trends of tropical forest terrestrial vertebrate communities from camera trap data: a tool for conservation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Reducing the loss of biodiversity is key to ensure the future well being of the planet. Indicators to measure the state of biodiversity should come from primary data that are collected using consistent field methods across several sites, longitudinal, and derived using sound statistical methods that correct for observation/detection bias. In this paper we analyze camera trap data collected between 2008 and 2012 at a site in Costa Rica (Volcan Barva transect) as part of an ongoing tropical forest global monitoring network (Tropical Ecology Assessment and Monitoring Network). We estimated occupancy dynamics for 13 species of mammals, using a hierarchical modeling approach. We calculated detection-corrected species richness and the Wildlife Picture Index, a promising new indicator derived from camera trap data that measures changes in biodiversity from the occupancy estimates of individual species. Our results show that 3 out of 13 species showed significant declines in occupancy over 5 years (lowland paca, Central American agouti, nine-banded armadillo). We hypothesize that hunting, competition and/or increased predation for paca and agouti might explain these patterns. Species richness and the Wildlife Picture Index are relatively stable at the site, but small herbivores that are hunted showed a decline in diversity of about 25%. We demonstrate the usefulness of longitudinal camera trap deployments coupled with modern statistical methods and advocate for the use of this approach in monitoring and developing global and national indicators for biodiversity change.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3762718?pdf=render
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