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Australian Mammalogy Australian Mammalogy Society
Journal of the Australian Mammal Society
RESEARCH ARTICLE

What are we missing? How the delay-period setting on camera traps affects mesopredator detection

Jessica Sparkes A F , Peter J. S. Fleming B C D , Adam McSorley E and Bruce Mitchell E
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Vertebrate Pest Research Unit, New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, Wagga Wagga Agricultural Institute, Pine Gully Road, Wagga Wagga, NSW 2650, Australia.

B Vertebrate Pest Research Unit, New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, Orange Agricultural Institute, Forest Road, Orange, NSW 2800, Australia.

C Ecosystem Management, School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.

D Institute for Agriculture and the Environment, Centre for Sustainable Agricultural Systems, University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Qld 4350, Australia.

E Pests and Weeds Unit, New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service, 43 Bridge Street, Hurstville, NSW 2220, Australia.

F Corresponding author. Email: jessica.todd@dpi.nsw.gov.au

Australian Mammalogy 43(2) 243-247 https://doi.org/10.1071/AM19068
Submitted: 11 December 2019  Accepted: 26 March 2020   Published: 29 April 2020

Abstract

Trigger-delays are often set on camera traps to save labour costs involved with servicing camera traps and reviewing images. However, the effects that delays of various length could have on data quantity and quality are unmeasured. Here, we aimed to assess how varying trigger-delays (5, 10, 30 and 60 min) or using an ‘independent event’ classification (i.e. a series of images taken less than 5 min apart on the same camera trap) affects detection rates and the number of individuals per trigger for feral cats and European red foxes. Using real camera trap images, we simulated trigger-delays of between 5 min and 60 min and compared with the independent events. Trigger-delays caused inaccuracies in detection frequencies of 3.6–22.0% for feral cats and 3.1–24.0% for foxes. Further, 68% of independent events in which two individual foxes were present were reduced to a single fox trigger when implementing a 5-min trigger-delay (n = 65). Using trigger-delays likely reduces accuracy and reliability of data generated for wildlife monitoring programs and could affect the types of observations and analyses able to be made from imagery so obtained.

Additional keywords: conservation, Felis catus, Oolambeyan National Park, Reconyx, trigger-delays, Vulpes vulpes.


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