Wildlife managers conduct population inventories to monitor species, particularly those at-risk. Although costly and time consuming, grid-based DNA hair-snag sampling has been the standard protocol for grizzly bear inventories in North America, while opportunistic fecal DNA sampling is more commonly used in Europe. Our aim is to determine if low-cost, low-effort scat sampling along roads can replace the current standard. We compare two genetic non-invasive techniques using concurrent sampling within the same grid system and spatially explicit capture–recapture. We found that given our methodology and the present status of fecal genotyping for grizzly bears, scat sampling along roads cannot replace hair sampling to estimate population size i...
International audienceNoninvasive genetic methods can be used to estimate animal abundances and offe...
Wildlife managers need reliable estimates of population size, trend, and distribution to recover at–...
Human activities have dramatic effects on the distribution and abundance of wildlife. Increased road...
Sound wildlife conservation decisions require sound information, and scientists increasingly rely on...
Genetic monitoring has proven helpful in estimating species presence and abundance, and detecting tr...
<div><p>We evaluated the potential of two noninvasive genetic sampling methods, hair traps and bear ...
It is often difficult to determine optimal sampling design for non-invasive genetic sampling, especi...
Accurate assessment of abundance can be expensive and managers often seek to minimize costs. Because...
Abstract One difficulty in the conservation of endangered wildlife is the lack of reliable informati...
DNA-based capture-mark-recapture techniques are commonly used to monitor wildlife populations. Analy...
Noninvasive genetic sampling is an important tool in wildlife ecology and management, typically rely...
The American black bear (Ursus americanus) in the southern Appalachians has been the subject of inte...
A fundamental challenge to estimating population size with mark–recapture methods is heterogeneous c...
We use genetic detection data from natural bear rub sites to estimate annual rate of change for a th...
Kopatz, A., Kleven, O., Friebe, A., Ahlqvist, D., Kindberg, J. & Flagstad, Ø. 2021. Effects of sampl...
International audienceNoninvasive genetic methods can be used to estimate animal abundances and offe...
Wildlife managers need reliable estimates of population size, trend, and distribution to recover at–...
Human activities have dramatic effects on the distribution and abundance of wildlife. Increased road...
Sound wildlife conservation decisions require sound information, and scientists increasingly rely on...
Genetic monitoring has proven helpful in estimating species presence and abundance, and detecting tr...
<div><p>We evaluated the potential of two noninvasive genetic sampling methods, hair traps and bear ...
It is often difficult to determine optimal sampling design for non-invasive genetic sampling, especi...
Accurate assessment of abundance can be expensive and managers often seek to minimize costs. Because...
Abstract One difficulty in the conservation of endangered wildlife is the lack of reliable informati...
DNA-based capture-mark-recapture techniques are commonly used to monitor wildlife populations. Analy...
Noninvasive genetic sampling is an important tool in wildlife ecology and management, typically rely...
The American black bear (Ursus americanus) in the southern Appalachians has been the subject of inte...
A fundamental challenge to estimating population size with mark–recapture methods is heterogeneous c...
We use genetic detection data from natural bear rub sites to estimate annual rate of change for a th...
Kopatz, A., Kleven, O., Friebe, A., Ahlqvist, D., Kindberg, J. & Flagstad, Ø. 2021. Effects of sampl...
International audienceNoninvasive genetic methods can be used to estimate animal abundances and offe...
Wildlife managers need reliable estimates of population size, trend, and distribution to recover at–...
Human activities have dramatic effects on the distribution and abundance of wildlife. Increased road...