Artículos de revistas
Combining point counts and autonomous recording units improves avian survey efficacy across elevational gradients on two continents
Fecha
2021Registro en:
Ecology and Evolution 2021;11:8654–8682.
10.1002/ece3.7678
Autor
Drake, Anna
de Zwaan, Devin R.
Altamirano, Tomás A.
Wilson, Scott
Hick, Kristina
Bravo, Camila
Ibarra, José Tomás
Martin, Kathy
Institución
Resumen
1. Accurate biodiversity and population monitoring is a requirement for effective
conservation decision making. Survey method bias is therefore a concern, particularly
when research programs face logistical and cost limitations.
2. We employed point counts (PCs) and autonomous recording units (ARUs) to survey
avian biodiversity within comparable, high elevation, temperate mountain habitats
at opposite ends of the Americas: nine mountains in British Columbia (BC), Canada,
and 10 in southern Chile. We compared detected species richness against multiyear
species inventories and examined method-specific
detection probability by
family. By incorporating time costs, we assessed the performance and efficiency
of single versus combined methods.
3. Species accumulation curves indicate ARUs can capture ~93% of species present
in BC but only ~58% in Chile, despite Chilean mountain communities being less diverse.
The avian community, rather than landscape composition, appears to drive
this dramatic difference. Chilean communities contain less-vocal
species, which
ARUs missed. Further, 6/13 families in BC were better detected by ARUs, while
11/11 families in Chile were better detected by PCs. Where survey conditions
differentially impacted method performance, PCs mostly varied over the morning
and with canopy cover in BC, while ARUs mostly varied seasonally in Chile. Within
a single year of monitoring, neither method alone was predicted to capture the
full avian community, with the exception of ARUs in the alpine and subalpine of
BC. PCs contributed little to detected diversity in BC, but including this method
resulted in negligible increases in total time costs. Combining PCs with ARUs in
Chile significantly increased species detections, again, for little cost.
4. Combined methods were among the most efficient and accurate approaches to
capturing diversity. We recommend conducting point counts, while ARUs are being
deployed and retrieved in order to capture additional diversity with minimal additional
effort and to flag methodological biases using a comparative framework.