1. Human visual identification of individual Andean bears Tremarctos ornatus
- Author
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Susanna Paisley, Corrin LaCombe, Russell C. Van Horn, Ximena Velez-Liendo, and Becky Zug
- Subjects
biology ,Individual animal ,Ecology ,Identity (social science) ,Visual identification ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,biology.organism_classification ,Experimental testing ,Geography ,Population estimation ,Identification (biology) ,Tremarctos ornatus ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
It is often challenging to use invasive methods of individual animal identification for population estimation, demographic analyses, and other ecological and behavioral analyses focused on individual-level processes. Recent improvements in camera traps make it possible to collect many photographic samples yet most investigators either leap from photographic sampling to assignment of individual identity without considering identification errors, or else to avoid those errors they develop computerized methods that produce accurate data with the unintended cost of excluding participation by local citizens. To assess human ability to visually identify Andean bears Tremarctos ornatus from their pelage markings we used surveys and experimental testing of 381 observers viewing photographs of 70 Andean bears of known identity. Neither observer experience nor confidence predicted their initial success rate at identifying individuals. However, after gaining experience observers were able to achieve an average succe...
- Published
- 2014
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