Survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose Alces alces in Sweden

We need to monitor wildlife populations to determine whether management goals are achieved and to improve future decisions. Therefore, it is important to evaluate the cost and accuracy of monitoring strategies in the context of management. Using a computer simulation of a harvested population, we te...

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Main Authors: Månsson, Johan, Hauser, Cindy, Andren, Henrik, Possingham, Hugh
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13718/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13718/1/mansson_et_al_161101.pdf
http://www.wildlifebiology.org/
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:13718 2023-05-15T13:13:12+02:00 Survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose Alces alces in Sweden Månsson, Johan Hauser, Cindy Andren, Henrik Possingham, Hugh 2011 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13718/ https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13718/1/mansson_et_al_161101.pdf http://www.wildlifebiology.org/ en eng eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13718/1/mansson_et_al_161101.pdf Månsson, Johan and Hauser, Cindy and Andren, Henrik and Possingham, Hugh (2011). Survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose Alces alces in Sweden. Wildlife biology. 17 :2 , 176-190 [Research article] cc_by_4 CC-BY Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use Ecology Zoology Research article PeerReviewed info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2011 ftslunivuppsala 2022-01-09T19:14:01Z We need to monitor wildlife populations to determine whether management goals are achieved and to improve future decisions. Therefore, it is important to evaluate the cost and accuracy of monitoring strategies in the context of management. Using a computer simulation of a harvested population, we tested the relative performance of three survey methods: aerial survey, pellet-group counts and hunters' observations, to inform about the management of Swedish moose Alces alces populations. Where more than one survey method was used in a single year, we used Bayes' theorem to combine information and estimate population size. We used two measures of performance: the fraction of time in which the population had an 'undesirable size and inter-annual variation in harvest. Furthermore, we traded these performance measures against their cost. An annual aerial survey was the most costly monitoring method (27,000(sic)) and maintained the population within the desired range 72% of the time. The least expensive monitoring strategy (hunters' observations; 1,600(sic)) maintained the population within a desired range of 66% of the time. A combination of two relatively inexpensive survey methods (i.e. pellet-group counts and hunters' observations; at an expense of 10,000(sic)) maintained the population within the desired range in 76% of the simulated years. Thus, a combination of annual pellet-group counts and hunters' observations performed better than annual aerial surveys, but was considerably less expensive. Furthermore, the annual combination of pellet-group counts and hunters' observations also performed best regarding the inter-annual harvest variation. Management actions only maintained the population within the desired range 81% of the time, even when population size was observed without error, mainly due to variable net growth rates. In wildlife management systems, where a variety of monitoring methods are used, the overall performance generally improves with monitoring expenditure, but very few studies explicitly account for expenditure. However, our study shows that combinations of inexpensive methods can reduce monitoring costs substantially while yielding an equal or an increased performance. Article in Journal/Newspaper Alces alces Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
op_collection_id ftslunivuppsala
language English
topic Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use
Ecology
Zoology
spellingShingle Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use
Ecology
Zoology
Månsson, Johan
Hauser, Cindy
Andren, Henrik
Possingham, Hugh
Survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose Alces alces in Sweden
topic_facet Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use
Ecology
Zoology
description We need to monitor wildlife populations to determine whether management goals are achieved and to improve future decisions. Therefore, it is important to evaluate the cost and accuracy of monitoring strategies in the context of management. Using a computer simulation of a harvested population, we tested the relative performance of three survey methods: aerial survey, pellet-group counts and hunters' observations, to inform about the management of Swedish moose Alces alces populations. Where more than one survey method was used in a single year, we used Bayes' theorem to combine information and estimate population size. We used two measures of performance: the fraction of time in which the population had an 'undesirable size and inter-annual variation in harvest. Furthermore, we traded these performance measures against their cost. An annual aerial survey was the most costly monitoring method (27,000(sic)) and maintained the population within the desired range 72% of the time. The least expensive monitoring strategy (hunters' observations; 1,600(sic)) maintained the population within a desired range of 66% of the time. A combination of two relatively inexpensive survey methods (i.e. pellet-group counts and hunters' observations; at an expense of 10,000(sic)) maintained the population within the desired range in 76% of the simulated years. Thus, a combination of annual pellet-group counts and hunters' observations performed better than annual aerial surveys, but was considerably less expensive. Furthermore, the annual combination of pellet-group counts and hunters' observations also performed best regarding the inter-annual harvest variation. Management actions only maintained the population within the desired range 81% of the time, even when population size was observed without error, mainly due to variable net growth rates. In wildlife management systems, where a variety of monitoring methods are used, the overall performance generally improves with monitoring expenditure, but very few studies explicitly account for expenditure. However, our study shows that combinations of inexpensive methods can reduce monitoring costs substantially while yielding an equal or an increased performance.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Månsson, Johan
Hauser, Cindy
Andren, Henrik
Possingham, Hugh
author_facet Månsson, Johan
Hauser, Cindy
Andren, Henrik
Possingham, Hugh
author_sort Månsson, Johan
title Survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose Alces alces in Sweden
title_short Survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose Alces alces in Sweden
title_full Survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose Alces alces in Sweden
title_fullStr Survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose Alces alces in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose Alces alces in Sweden
title_sort survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose alces alces in sweden
publishDate 2011
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13718/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13718/1/mansson_et_al_161101.pdf
http://www.wildlifebiology.org/
genre Alces alces
genre_facet Alces alces
op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13718/1/mansson_et_al_161101.pdf
Månsson, Johan and Hauser, Cindy and Andren, Henrik and Possingham, Hugh (2011). Survey method choice for wildlife management: the case of moose Alces alces in Sweden. Wildlife biology. 17 :2 , 176-190 [Research article]
op_rights cc_by_4
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
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