Thinking outside the park: recommendations for camera trapping mammal communities in the urban matrix

Author:

Herrera Daniel J1ORCID,Moore Sophie M1ORCID,Flockhart D T Tyler2ORCID,McShea William J3,Cove Michael V4

Affiliation:

1. Humane Rescue Alliance, 71 Oglethorpe Street NW, Washington, DC 20011, USA

2. Appalachian Laboratory, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, 301 Braddock Rd, Frostburg, MD 21532, USA

3. Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, 1500 Remount Road, Front Royal, VA, 22630, USA

4. North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, 11 W Jones Street, Raleigh, NC, 27601, USA

Abstract

Abstract Urbanization is increasing globally, fragmenting habitats and prompting human–wildlife conflict. Urban wildlife research is concurrently expanding, but sampling methods are often biased towards large and intact habitats in public green spaces, neglecting the far more abundant, but degraded, habitats in the urban matrix. Here, we introduce the Five P’s of Urban Ecology—Partnerships, Planning, Placements, Public participation and Processing—as a path to overcoming the logistical barriers often associated with camera-trapping in the urban matrix. Though the Five P’s can be applied to a variety of urban sampling methods, we showcase the camera-trapping efforts of the DC Cat Count project in Washington, DC, as a case study. We compared occupancy models for eight urban mammal species using broad categorizations of land cover and local land use to determine drivers of mammal occurrence within the urban matrix as compared with urban habitat patches. Many native species maintained a strong association with large, semi-natural green spaces, but occupancy was not limited to these locations, and in some cases, the use of private yards and the built environment were not notably different. Furthermore, some species exhibited higher occupancy probabilities in developed areas over green spaces. Though seemingly intuitive, we offer advice on how to greatly reduce habitat-biased sampling methods in urban wildlife research and illustrate the importance of doing so to ensure accurate results that support the formation of effective urban planning and policy.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Urban Studies,Ecology

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