1. Sampling freshwater turtle populations using hoop nets: Testing potential biases.
- Author
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Mali, Ivana, Brown, Donald J., Ferrato, Jacqueline R., and Forstner, Michael R. J.
- Subjects
TURTLE populations ,ANIMAL traps ,NETS ,COLLECTION & preservation of zoological specimens ,WILDLIFE management - Abstract
ABSTRACT The baited hoop-net is one of the most heavily used sampling tools for monitoring freshwater turtle populations. In the past several years, we have published a series of studies that tested potential biases associated with this sampling method. For this paper, we used a new experiment to directly test the influence of trap-mouth opening size on both captures and escapes. We also summarized the results from previous studies to direct future research on this topic and provide a useful guide for managers and researchers using this sampling device. In our experiment during May 2013 in Texas, USA, we found that traps with larger mouth-openings were more efficient at capturing turtles, while escapes were minimal for both mouth sizes. Thus, at least within the boundaries we tested here, increasing mouth-opening size is an effective way to increase captures without introducing biases caused by differential escape probabilities. © 2014 The Wildlife Society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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