Author:
Catling P. C.,Burt R. J.,Kooyman R.
Abstract
An extensive fauna survey of forest habitats in the Murwillumbah Forestry
Management Area of north-eastern New South Wales allowed us to examine and
compare the use of Elliott traps, wire cage traps, soil plots, hair tubes,
spotlighting, dry pitfall traps, sightings and vocalisations as methods to
determine the identity, distribution and abundance of ground-dwelling and
arboreal mammals. Transects were established in 10 areas in six State Forests
and one National Park.
The aim of this study was to examine each method to satisfy three criteria and
to determine the most efficient and effective method or combination of methods
to survey arboreal and ground-dwelling mammals in forests. The three criteria
were to identify the species present, to determine their distribution and to
establish an index of their abundance. In all, 35 species were identified by
the seven methods. However, the species recorded, and the usefulness of the
method to provide their distribution and/or an index of abundance,
differed markedly according to the method used.
Stratified sampling with Elliott traps for small mammals, spotlights for
arboreal mammals and soil plots for medium-sized and large ground-dwelling
mammals was the most labour-efficient and productive combination for recording
species present and their status comprehensively. If needed, other methods
such as hair tubes or cage traps may be used locally and intensively to assist
in the identification of species. Moreover, randomly gathered sight and
vocalisation records accumulated during the survey were found to be very
useful in corroborating species present and in helping to identify the tracks
recorded to genus or family by the soil-plot method.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
61 articles.
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