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Effects of trapping effort and trap placement on estimating abundance of Humboldt’s flying squirrels

Live trapping is a common tool used to assess demography of small mammals. However, live-trapping is often expensive and stressful to captured individuals. Thus, assessing the relative tradeoffs among study goals, project expenses, and animal well-being is necessary. Here, we evaluated how apparent...

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Autores principales: Weldy, Matthew J., Wilson, Todd M., Lesmeister, Damon B., Epps, Clinton W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6778666/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31592350
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7783
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author Weldy, Matthew J.
Wilson, Todd M.
Lesmeister, Damon B.
Epps, Clinton W.
author_facet Weldy, Matthew J.
Wilson, Todd M.
Lesmeister, Damon B.
Epps, Clinton W.
author_sort Weldy, Matthew J.
collection PubMed
description Live trapping is a common tool used to assess demography of small mammals. However, live-trapping is often expensive and stressful to captured individuals. Thus, assessing the relative tradeoffs among study goals, project expenses, and animal well-being is necessary. Here, we evaluated how apparent bias and precision of estimates for apparent annual survival, abundance, capture probability, and recapture probability of Humboldt’s flying squirrels (Glaucomys oregonensis) varied with the number of secondary trapping occasions. We used data from forested sites trapped on 12 consecutive occasions annually in the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest (9 sites, 6 years) and the Siuslaw National Forest (seven sites, three years) in Oregon. We used Huggins robust design models to estimate parameters of interest for the first 4, 8, and 12 trapping occasions. We also estimated the effect of attaching Tomahawk traps to tree boles on site- and year-specific flying squirrel capture frequencies. Our estimates with 12 occasions were similar to those from previous studies. Abundances and capture probabilities were variable among years on both sites; however, variation was much lower on the Siuslaw sites. Reducing the length of primary trapping occasions from 12 to 8 nights had very little impact on parameter estimates, but further reducing the length of primary trapping occasions to four nights caused substantial apparent bias in parameter estimates and decreased precision. We found that attaching Tomahawk traps to tree boles increased the site- and year-specific capture frequency of flying squirrels. Our results suggest that live-trapping studies targeting Humboldt’s flying squirrels in the Pacific Northwest of the United States could reduce per-site costs and stress to captured individuals without biasing estimates by reducing the length of primary trapping occasions to 8 nights. We encourage similar analyses for other commonly-trapped species in these and other ecosystems.
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spelling pubmed-67786662019-10-07 Effects of trapping effort and trap placement on estimating abundance of Humboldt’s flying squirrels Weldy, Matthew J. Wilson, Todd M. Lesmeister, Damon B. Epps, Clinton W. PeerJ Conservation Biology Live trapping is a common tool used to assess demography of small mammals. However, live-trapping is often expensive and stressful to captured individuals. Thus, assessing the relative tradeoffs among study goals, project expenses, and animal well-being is necessary. Here, we evaluated how apparent bias and precision of estimates for apparent annual survival, abundance, capture probability, and recapture probability of Humboldt’s flying squirrels (Glaucomys oregonensis) varied with the number of secondary trapping occasions. We used data from forested sites trapped on 12 consecutive occasions annually in the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest (9 sites, 6 years) and the Siuslaw National Forest (seven sites, three years) in Oregon. We used Huggins robust design models to estimate parameters of interest for the first 4, 8, and 12 trapping occasions. We also estimated the effect of attaching Tomahawk traps to tree boles on site- and year-specific flying squirrel capture frequencies. Our estimates with 12 occasions were similar to those from previous studies. Abundances and capture probabilities were variable among years on both sites; however, variation was much lower on the Siuslaw sites. Reducing the length of primary trapping occasions from 12 to 8 nights had very little impact on parameter estimates, but further reducing the length of primary trapping occasions to four nights caused substantial apparent bias in parameter estimates and decreased precision. We found that attaching Tomahawk traps to tree boles increased the site- and year-specific capture frequency of flying squirrels. Our results suggest that live-trapping studies targeting Humboldt’s flying squirrels in the Pacific Northwest of the United States could reduce per-site costs and stress to captured individuals without biasing estimates by reducing the length of primary trapping occasions to 8 nights. We encourage similar analyses for other commonly-trapped species in these and other ecosystems. PeerJ Inc. 2019-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC6778666/ /pubmed/31592350 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7783 Text en ©2019 Weldy et al. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, made available under the Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) . This work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Conservation Biology
Weldy, Matthew J.
Wilson, Todd M.
Lesmeister, Damon B.
Epps, Clinton W.
Effects of trapping effort and trap placement on estimating abundance of Humboldt’s flying squirrels
title Effects of trapping effort and trap placement on estimating abundance of Humboldt’s flying squirrels
title_full Effects of trapping effort and trap placement on estimating abundance of Humboldt’s flying squirrels
title_fullStr Effects of trapping effort and trap placement on estimating abundance of Humboldt’s flying squirrels
title_full_unstemmed Effects of trapping effort and trap placement on estimating abundance of Humboldt’s flying squirrels
title_short Effects of trapping effort and trap placement on estimating abundance of Humboldt’s flying squirrels
title_sort effects of trapping effort and trap placement on estimating abundance of humboldt’s flying squirrels
topic Conservation Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6778666/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31592350
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7783
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