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Assessing tiger population dynamics using photographic capture-recapture sampling

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TLDR
The ability to model the entire photographic capture history data set and incorporate reduced-parameter models led to estimates of mean annual population change that were sufficiently precise to be useful, consistent with the hypothesis that protected wild tiger populations can remain healthy despite heavy mortalities.
Abstract
Although wide-ranging, elusive, large carnivore species, such as the tiger, are of scientific and conservation interest, rigorous inferences about their population dynamics are scarce because of methodological problems of sampling populations at the required spatial and temporal scales. We report the application of a rigorous, noninvasive method for assessing tiger population dynamics to test model-based predictions about population viability. We obtained photographic capture histories for 74 individual tigers during a nine-year study involving 5725 trap-nights of effort. These data were modeled under a likelihood-based, "robust design" capture-recapture analytic framework. We explicitly modeled and estimated ecological parameters such as time-specific abundance, density, survival, recruitment, temporary emigration, and transience, using models that incorporated effects of factors such as individual heterogeneity, trap-response, and time on probabilities of photo-capturing tigers. The model estimated a random temporary emigration parameter of gamma" = gamma' = 0.10 +/- 0.069 (values are estimated mean +/- SE). When scaled to an annual basis, tiger survival rates were estimated at S = 0.77 +/- 0.051, and the estimated probability that a newly caught animal was a transient was tau = 0.18 +/- 0.11. During the period when the sampled area was of constant size, the estimated population size N(t) varied from 17 +/- 1.7 to 31 +/- 2.1 tigers, with a geometric mean rate of annual population change estimated as lambda = 1.03 +/- 0.020, representing a 3% annual increase. The estimated recruitment of new animals, B(t), varied from 0 +/- 3.0 to 14 +/- 2.9 tigers. Population density estimates, D, ranged from 7.33 +/- 0.8 tigers/100 km2 to 21.73 +/- 1.7 tigers/100 km2 during the study. Thus, despite substantial annual losses and temporal variation in recruitment, the tiger density remained at relatively high levels in Nagarahole. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that protected wild tiger populations can remain healthy despite heavy mortalities because of their inherently high reproductive potential. The ability to model the entire photographic capture history data set and incorporate reduced-parameter models led to estimates of mean annual population change that were sufficiently precise to be useful. This efficient, noninvasive sampling approach can be used to rigorously investigate the population dynamics of tigers and other elusive, rare, wide-ranging animal species in which individuals can be identified from photographs or other means.

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An evaluation of camera traps for inventorying large‐ and medium‐sized terrestrial rainforest mammals

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the efficiency of camera traps based on data from two surveys carried out at a single site during two consecutive years, and demonstrated the exponential increase in survey effort required to record the most elusive species.
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"Which camera trap type and how many do I need?" A review of camera features and study designs for a range of wildlife research applications

TL;DR: The "ultimate camera trap", as desired by wildlife biologists, and the current technological limitations of camera traps in relation to their potential for a number of emerging applications are summarized.
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Big cats in our backyards: Persistence of large carnivores in a human dominated landscape in India

TL;DR: This study used photographic capture recapture analysis to assess the density of large carnivores in a human-dominated agricultural landscape with density >300 people/km2 in western Maharashtra, India and found evidence of a wide suite of wild carnivores inhabiting a cropland landscape devoid of wilderness and wild herbivore prey.
References
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Book

Model Selection and Multimodel Inference: A Practical Information-Theoretic Approach

TL;DR: The second edition of this book is unique in that it focuses on methods for making formal statistical inference from all the models in an a priori set (Multi-Model Inference).
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Program MARK: survival estimation from populations of marked animals

TL;DR: Mark as discussed by the authors provides parameter estimates from marked animals when they are re-encountered at a later time as dead recoveries, or live recaptures or re-sightings.
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Regression and time series model selection in small samples

TL;DR: In this article, a bias correction to the Akaike information criterion, called AICC, is derived for regression and autoregressive time series models, which is of particular use when the sample size is small, or when the number of fitted parameters is a moderate to large fraction of the sample sample size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling Survival and Testing Biological Hypotheses Using Marked Animals: A Unified Approach with Case Studies

TL;DR: A recent survey of capture-recapture models can be found in this article, with an emphasis on flexibility in modeling, model selection, and the analysis of multiple data sets.

Modeling Survival and Testing Biological Hypotheses Using Marked Animals: A Unified

TL;DR: This paper synthesizes, using a common framework, recent developments of capture-recapture models oriented to estimation of survival rates together with new ones, with an emphasis on flexibility in modeling, model selection, and the analysis of multiple data sets.
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