Applying and testing a novel method to estimate animal density from motion-triggered cameras
Marcus Becker, David J. Huggard, Melanie Dickie, Camille Warbington,, Jim Schieck, Emily Herdman, Robert Serrouya, Stan Boutin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new camera-based method called TIFC for estimating animal density without individual identification, validated with multi-year data and compared to aerial surveys, highlighting its potential and limitations.
Contribution
The study presents a novel TIFC approach for unmarked animal density estimation using still images, with a reproducible methodology and validation against aerial surveys.
Findings
TIFC estimates are comparable to aerial survey results after correction.
The method works across multiple species and large datasets.
Limitations include assumption violations and measurement errors.
Abstract
Estimating animal abundance and density are fundamental goals of many wildlife monitoring programs. Camera trapping has become an increasingly popular tool to achieve these monitoring goals due to recent advances in modeling approaches and the capacity to simultaneously collect data on multiple species. However, estimating the density of unmarked populations continues to be problematic due to the difficulty in implementing complex modeling approaches, low precision of estimates, and absence of rigor in testing of model assumptions and their influence on results. Here, we describe a novel approach that uses still image camera traps to estimate animal density without the need for individual identification, based on the Time spent In Front of the Camera (TIFC). Using results from a large-scale multi-species monitoring program with nearly 3,000 cameras deployed over six years in Alberta,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWildlife Ecology and Conservation · Species Distribution and Climate Change · Rangeland and Wildlife Management
