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Identification of threatened rodent species using infrared and white-flash camera traps

Authors :
Kevin C. Rowe
Benjamin L. Phillips
Phoebe A. Burns
Marissa L. Parrott
Source :
Australian Mammalogy. 40:188
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
CSIRO Publishing, 2018.

Abstract

Camera trapping has evolved into an efficient technique for gathering presence/absence data for many species; however, smaller mammals such as rodents are often difficult to identify in images. Identification is inhibited by co-occurrence with similar-sized small mammal species and by camera set-ups that do not provide adequate image quality. Here we describe survey procedures for identification of two small, threatened rodent species – smoky mouse (Pseudomys fumeus) and New Holland mouse (P. novaehollandiae) – using white-flash and infrared camera traps. We tested whether observers could accurately identify each species and whether experience with small mammals influenced accuracy. Pseudomys fumeus was ~20 times less likely to be misidentified on white-flash images than infrared, and observer experience affected accuracy only for infrared images, where it accounted for all observer variance. Misidentifications of P. novaehollandiae were more common across both flash types: false positives (>0.21) were more common than false negatives (

Details

ISSN :
03100049
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Australian Mammalogy
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8d6e6543576d24e968ce64f1c3191315
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1071/am17016