Dear all,

We are pleased to announce our new publication:

Julian A. Tyne, Neil R. Loneragan, David W. Johnston, Kenneth H. Pollock, Rob 
Williams and Lars Bejder. (2016) Evaluating monitoring methods for cetaceans, 
Biological Conservation. 201:252-260

http://mucru.org/new-publication-evaluating-monitoring-methods-for-cetaceans/

Abstract

With increasing human pressures on wildlife comes a responsibility to monitor 
them effectively, particularly in an environment of declining research funds. 
Scarce funding resources compromise the level and efficacy of monitoring 
possible to detect trends in abundance, highlighting the priority for 
developing cost-effective programs. A systematic and rigorous sampling regime 
was developed to estimate abundance of a small, genetically isolated spinner 
dolphin (Stenella longirostris) population exposed to high levels of human 
activities. Five monitoring scenarios to detect trends in abundance were 
evaluated by varying sampling effort, precision, power, and sampling interval. 
Scenario 1 consisted of monthly surveys, each of 12 days, used to obtain the 
initial two consecutive annual abundance estimates. Scenarios 2, 3, and 4 
consisted of a reduced effort, while Scenario 5 doubled the effort of Scenario 
1. Scenarios with the greatest effort (1 and 5) produced the most precise 
abundance estimates (CV = 0.09). Using a CV = 0.09 and power of 80%, it would 
take 9 years to detect a 5% annual change in abundance compared with 12 years 
at a power of 95%. Under this best-case monitoring scenario, if the trend was a 
decline, the population would have decreased by 37% and 46%, respectively, 
prior to detection of a significant decline. With the potential of a large 
decline in a small population prior to detection, the lower power level should 
be used to trigger a management intervention. The approach presented here is 
applicable across taxa for which individuals can be identified, including 
terrestrial and aquatic mammals, birds, and reptiles.

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006320716302890

For a PDF requests please contact me at [email protected]

Kind regards,
Julian

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