Author:
Craig Michael D.,Roberts J. Dale
Abstract
We assessed the influence of sampling biases on estimates of absolute density.
Using area searches for birds on 1-ha plots, we showed that time of day,
weather and vegetation density (logged v. unlogged
forest) had no significant impact on the detection rates of birds. As a
consequence these environmental variables did not affect estimates of total
bird density or species richness. Amount of cloud cover was positively
correlated with abundance of three species (white-browed scrubwren, inland
thornbill and white-naped honeyeater) but negatively correlated with counts of
the western gerygone. Radio-tracking of western yellow robins showed that
about half of all birds present on a plot were detected during area searches.
However, robins moved over an area twice as large as the plot searched. These
errors compensate to give an accurate estimate of density for this species.
Collectively, these results indicate that area searches give a reliable
estimate of density in both logged and unlogged eucalypt forest.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
15 articles.
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