Camera trapping ocelots: An evaluation of felid attractants
Fecha
2014
Autores
Cove, Michael
Spinola, Manuel
Jackson, Victoria
Saenz, Joel
Título de la revista
ISSN de la revista
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Editor
Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica
Resumen
Ocelots (Leopardus pardalis) and other wild cats are often surveyed using camera traps to
identify individuals for density estimation via capture-recapture analyses or estimate occupancy
via detection/non-detection analyses. Though attractants are sometimes used in such surveys, there
have not been any evaluations of the effectiveness of common visual and olfactory attractants in
field settings. As part of a medium and large mammal camera survey in the San Juan – La Selva
Biological Corridor, Costa Rica, we integrated camera trap data within an occupancy modelling
framework to estimate the effects of hanging compact disks (visual), cologne (olfactory), and
sardines in oil (olfactory) on ocelot detection probabilities. Compact disks appeared to have the
most information-theoretic model support, whereas cologne received less model support. The use
of compact disks in surveys was also less time-consuming and less expensive than the olfactory at tractants. Ocelots are visual hunters and using visual attractants can increase detection probabilities
and therefore reduce uncertainty and/or reduce survey effort to obtain robust population or occu pancy estimates, although using cologne might also have similar effects. Depending on logistic
constraints, we recommend employing several attractants as the most appropriate way to survey
ocelots and other rare felids in the future when detection biases are assumed to be strong, particu larly as part of mammal community surveys.