Robert G. Carson’s research while affiliated with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and other places

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Publications (1)


Visibility Bias during Aerial Surveys of Elk in Northcentral Idaho
  • Article

July 1987

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41 Reads

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233 Citations

Journal of Wildlife Management

Michael D. Samuel

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Robert G. Carson

Radio-collared elk (Cervus elaphus) were used to assess the importance of visibility factors during winter helicopter surveys in northcentral Idaho. Radio collars facilitated monitoring elk groups to determine whether elk were observed or missed during helicopter counts. Multivariate analysis indicated that visibility was significantly influenced by group size and vegetation cover. Snow cover, search rate, animal behavior, and different observers did not significantly affect visibility of elk. A sightability model was developed to predict the probability of observing elk groups during winter aerial counts.

Citations (1)


... A miscount of 0.88-0.96 of the true abundance was for instance found for elk living in an open landscape (Cogan & Diefenbach, 1998). Moreover, the detection probability of each group increased with group size, simulating a real-case scenario in which groups of few individuals are more difficult to detect than large groups (Graham & Bell, 1989;Samuel et al., 1987;Schlossberg et al., 2018). We considered that groups larger than a certain size (i.e., 15 individuals in our simulations) all had the highest probability of being detected, while the detectability was lower for smaller groups. ...

Reference:

A new double observer‐based census framework to improve abundance estimations in mountain ungulates and other gregarious species with a reduced effort
Visibility Bias during Aerial Surveys of Elk in Northcentral Idaho
  • Citing Article
  • July 1987

Journal of Wildlife Management