Author:
Mayberry Chris,Bencini Roberta,Mawson Peter R.,Maloney Shane K.
Abstract
Scientific studies and population management may benefit from knowledge of the age structure of a target population. We evaluated traditional and newly developed methods of estimating the age of kangaroos with data from 336 western grey kangaroos (Macropus fuliginosus) culled from a wild population in south-western Australia. We compared their ages based on molar progression with data on head, leg, and foot length, a balanced sum of all three measures, dried eye-lens weight, and molar wear score, and derived formulae to estimate age from each variable. Molar wear score has a linear relationship to molar progression and therefore leads to similar estimations of age, but requires only one complete arcade of molars. Because the relationships between age and the lengths of head, foot and leg are curvilinear, these become less reliable indicators of age with increasing age but the accuracy can be improved by considering a combination of the lengths of head, foot, and leg. Estimation of age from dried lens weight is more accurate than estimation from morphometry. The use of morphometry to estimate the age of kangaroos older than two years is more reliable than previously thought and requisite data can be collected from live animals. Where lethal methods are needed to collect samples, a largely intact skull, a single arcade of molars, or the lens extracted from one eye can reliably be used to estimate age.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
4 articles.
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