Abstract
Some factors that may affect the aerial counts of dugongs, dolphins and turtles were examined experimentally.
Tidal influence did not affect the counts of dugongs or dolphins, but those of turtles increased around high
tide. A combined doubling of survey altitude and transect width reduced observed density of all three classes
of animals by 50%. The counts of four observers did not differ significantly, but further data counsel caution.
Overcast weather depressed counts of dugongs and turtles. Dolphin counts were affected by water surface
condition, counts being lowest in choppy seas. A mark-recapture model was used on tandem observations
to derive correction factors for groups of animals missed on the surface of a transect. Observers missed between
33% and 75% of dugong groups on the surface, the probability of detection decreasing with increased survey
altitude and transect width. A similar range and pattern of probabilities was found for dolphins and turtles.
Dugongs were censused in the coastal waters of the Northern Territory between the Daly River and Millingimbi
in December 1983, an area of 28 746 km*2. Sampling intensity was 7.6%. A minimum population of
2953 � 530 (standard error) was estimated, an overall relative density of 0.11 � 0.02 km-2. A theoretical
correction for submerged dugongs not seen yielded a total population estimate of 38 000, an overall density
of 1.46 km-2. The distribution of dugongs in the survey area was patchy, the highest densities being
associated with shallow coastal waters, sheltered bays, and large islands.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
33 articles.
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