Small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the Upper Nilgiris, southern India: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance

Capture-mark-recapture was used to study small mammal populations in tropical montane forests in southern India. Eleven plots in six montane forest patches were sampled from February-October, 1994. Six species were captured, including four rodents and two shrews. PROGRAM CAPTURE was used to derive e...

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Main Author: Shanker, Kartik
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Indian Academy of Sciences 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/1824/
http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/1824/1/37small25(1)%2Dmar2000.pdf
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spelling ftiiscindia:oai:eprints.iisc.ernet.in:1824 2023-05-15T18:05:28+02:00 Small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the Upper Nilgiris, southern India: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance Shanker, Kartik 2000-03 application/pdf http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/1824/ http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/1824/1/37small25(1)%2Dmar2000.pdf unknown Indian Academy of Sciences http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/1824/1/37small25(1)%2Dmar2000.pdf Shanker, Kartik (2000) Small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the Upper Nilgiris, southern India: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance. In: Journal of Biosciences, 25 (1). pp. 99-111. Centre for Ecological Sciences Journal Article PeerReviewed 2000 ftiiscindia 2014-09-27T16:57:48Z Capture-mark-recapture was used to study small mammal populations in tropical montane forests in southern India. Eleven plots in six montane forest patches were sampled from February-October, 1994. Six species were captured, including four rodents and two shrews. PROGRAM CAPTURE was used to derive estimates of density of the most abundant species in the study area, Rattus rattus Linnaeus. The coefficient of variation of the density estimate was used as an index of precision. The coefficient of variation decreased exponentially with increasing capture probability and with an increase in trapping duration. The coefficient of variation and the capture probability were not correlated with estimates of density. The density estimate increased with trapping duration, as did trap mortality. The latter may have been due to the trend of increased mortality with recaptures of the same individual, which in turn may have been due to weight loss over consecutive captures. Estimates of density derived using four estimators were different for 2, 3, 4 and 5 days of trapping. The coefficient of variation was highest for the generalized removal estimate and lowest for Darrochs estimate. The models and estimators could not be applied to more than one species, and for this species, only in select habitats in a few seasons. Therefore, models of density estimation developed for temperate areas may not be suitable for tropical habitats due to low densities of small mammals in these habitats. Article in Journal/Newspaper Rattus rattus Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore: ePrints@IIsc
institution Open Polar
collection Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore: ePrints@IIsc
op_collection_id ftiiscindia
language unknown
topic Centre for Ecological Sciences
spellingShingle Centre for Ecological Sciences
Shanker, Kartik
Small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the Upper Nilgiris, southern India: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance
topic_facet Centre for Ecological Sciences
description Capture-mark-recapture was used to study small mammal populations in tropical montane forests in southern India. Eleven plots in six montane forest patches were sampled from February-October, 1994. Six species were captured, including four rodents and two shrews. PROGRAM CAPTURE was used to derive estimates of density of the most abundant species in the study area, Rattus rattus Linnaeus. The coefficient of variation of the density estimate was used as an index of precision. The coefficient of variation decreased exponentially with increasing capture probability and with an increase in trapping duration. The coefficient of variation and the capture probability were not correlated with estimates of density. The density estimate increased with trapping duration, as did trap mortality. The latter may have been due to the trend of increased mortality with recaptures of the same individual, which in turn may have been due to weight loss over consecutive captures. Estimates of density derived using four estimators were different for 2, 3, 4 and 5 days of trapping. The coefficient of variation was highest for the generalized removal estimate and lowest for Darrochs estimate. The models and estimators could not be applied to more than one species, and for this species, only in select habitats in a few seasons. Therefore, models of density estimation developed for temperate areas may not be suitable for tropical habitats due to low densities of small mammals in these habitats.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Shanker, Kartik
author_facet Shanker, Kartik
author_sort Shanker, Kartik
title Small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the Upper Nilgiris, southern India: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance
title_short Small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the Upper Nilgiris, southern India: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance
title_full Small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the Upper Nilgiris, southern India: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance
title_fullStr Small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the Upper Nilgiris, southern India: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance
title_full_unstemmed Small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the Upper Nilgiris, southern India: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance
title_sort small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the upper nilgiris, southern india: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance
publisher Indian Academy of Sciences
publishDate 2000
url http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/1824/
http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/1824/1/37small25(1)%2Dmar2000.pdf
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
op_relation http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/1824/1/37small25(1)%2Dmar2000.pdf
Shanker, Kartik (2000) Small mammal trapping in tropical montane forests of the Upper Nilgiris, southern India: an evaluation of capture-recapture models in estimating abundance. In: Journal of Biosciences, 25 (1). pp. 99-111.
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