<div><p>Reliably estimating wildlife abundance is fundamental to effective management. Aerial surveys are one of the only spatially robust tools for estimating large mammal populations, but statistical sampling methods are required to address detection biases that affect accuracy and precision of the estimates. Although various methods for correcting aerial survey bias are employed on large mammal species around the world, these have rarely been rigorously validated. Several populations of feral horses (<i>Equus caballus</i>) in the western United States have been intensively studied, resulting in identification of all unique individuals. This provided a rare opportunity to test aerial survey bias correction on populations of known abundanc...
1.Steinhorst&Samuel(1989)showedhowlogistic-regressionmodels,fit to detection data collected from rad...
Wildlife managers need reliable, cost-efficient, and repeatable methods for evaluating temporal chan...
A valid concern when structuring an aerial survey of wildlife populations is the presence of visibil...
Aerial surveys are an effective way to track population trends of large mammals, but population size...
<p>Abundance estimates or change in abundance (black dots) and 95% confidence intervals for aerial s...
Accurate counts of animals are critical for prioritizing conservation efforts. Past research, howeve...
Aerial surveys are an efficient technique for counting animals over large areas. However, only 15– 8...
Estimation of population abundance is one of the most difficult tasks in wildlife management. In cas...
Whether a species is rare and requires protection or is overabundant and needs control, an accurate ...
The accuracy of aerial censuses in estimating absolute density of wildlife populations varies widely...
Examines possible bias in aerial surveys of animals due to dispersion, using extensive data on cattl...
Accurate counts of animals are critical for prioritizing conservation efforts. Past research, howeve...
Incomplete detection of all individuals leading to negative bias in abundance estimates is a pervasi...
It is common to use multiple field sampling methods when implementing wildlife surveys to compare me...
AbstractAccurately estimating the size of wildlife populations is critical to wildlife management an...
1.Steinhorst&Samuel(1989)showedhowlogistic-regressionmodels,fit to detection data collected from rad...
Wildlife managers need reliable, cost-efficient, and repeatable methods for evaluating temporal chan...
A valid concern when structuring an aerial survey of wildlife populations is the presence of visibil...
Aerial surveys are an effective way to track population trends of large mammals, but population size...
<p>Abundance estimates or change in abundance (black dots) and 95% confidence intervals for aerial s...
Accurate counts of animals are critical for prioritizing conservation efforts. Past research, howeve...
Aerial surveys are an efficient technique for counting animals over large areas. However, only 15– 8...
Estimation of population abundance is one of the most difficult tasks in wildlife management. In cas...
Whether a species is rare and requires protection or is overabundant and needs control, an accurate ...
The accuracy of aerial censuses in estimating absolute density of wildlife populations varies widely...
Examines possible bias in aerial surveys of animals due to dispersion, using extensive data on cattl...
Accurate counts of animals are critical for prioritizing conservation efforts. Past research, howeve...
Incomplete detection of all individuals leading to negative bias in abundance estimates is a pervasi...
It is common to use multiple field sampling methods when implementing wildlife surveys to compare me...
AbstractAccurately estimating the size of wildlife populations is critical to wildlife management an...
1.Steinhorst&Samuel(1989)showedhowlogistic-regressionmodels,fit to detection data collected from rad...
Wildlife managers need reliable, cost-efficient, and repeatable methods for evaluating temporal chan...
A valid concern when structuring an aerial survey of wildlife populations is the presence of visibil...