Journal article

Estimating and dealing with detectability in occupancy surveys for forest owls and arboreal marsupials

BA Wintle, RP Kavanagh, MA McCarthy, MA Burgman

Journal of Wildlife Management | Published : 2005

Abstract

Surveys that record the presence or absence of fauna are used widely in wildlife management and research. A false absence occurs when an observer fails to record a resident species. There is a growing appreciation of the importance of false absences in wildlife surveys and its influence on impact assessment, monitoring, habitat analyses, and population modeling. Very few studies explicitly quantify the rate of these errors. Quantifying the rate of false absences provides a basis for estimating the survey effort necessary to assert that a species is absent with a pre-specified degree of confidence and allows uncertainty arising from false absences to be incorporated in inference. We estimated..

View full abstract