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Wildlife Research Wildlife Research
Volume 35 Number 4 2008
Aerial Surveys of Wildlife: Theory and Applications


Preface to 'Aerial Surveys of Wildlife: Theory and Applications' 

Peter J. S. Fleming and John P. Tracey

pp. iii-iv

 


On bias, precision and accuracy in wildlife aerial surveys 

Jim Hone

pp. 253-257

  
 


Some human, aircraft and animal factors affecting aerial surveys: how to enumerate animals from the air 

Peter J. S. Fleming and John P. Tracey

pp. 258-267

  
 


Theory and application of mark–recapture and related techniques to aerial surveys of wildlife 

Richard Barker

pp. 268-274

  
 


The influence of animal mobility on the assumption of uniform distances in aerial line-transect surveys 

Rachel M. Fewster, Colin Southwell, David L. Borchers, Stephen T. Buckland and Anthony R. Pople

pp. 275-288

  
 


Coping with variation in aerial survey protocol for line-transect sampling 

Jeff Laake, Richard J. Guenzel, John L. Bengtson, Peter Boveng, Michael Cameron and M. Bradley Hanson

pp. 289-299

  
 


Visibility bias in aerial survey: mark–recapture, line-transect or both? 

Jeff Laake, Michelle J. Dawson and Jim Hone

pp. 299-309

  
 


Aerial surveys of multiple species: critical assumptions and sources of bias in distance and mark–recapture estimators 

Gavin J. Melville, John P. Tracey, Peter J. S. Fleming and Brian S. Lukins

pp. 310-348

  
 


A comparison of mark–recapture distance-sampling methods applied to aerial surveys of eastern grey kangaroos 

Rachel M. Fewster and Anthony R. Pople

pp. 320-330

  
 


Design of aerial surveys for population estimation and the management of macropods in the Northern Tablelands of New South Wales, Australia 

S. C. Cairns, G. W. Lollback and N. Payne

pp. 331-339

  
 


Frequency and precision of aerial surveys for kangaroo management 

A. R. Pople

pp. 340-348

  
 


Detectability of penguins in aerial surveys over the pack-ice off Antarctica 

Colin Southwell, Charles G. M. Paxton and David L. Borchers

pp. 349-357

  
 


Evaluating helicopter-based surveys for estimating densities of Himalayan thar 

David Choquenot, Neil Bolton and Darrin Woods

pp. 358-364

  
 


Aerial mark–recapture estimates of wild horses using natural markings 

Michelle J. Dawson and Cameron Miller

pp. 365-370

  
 


Application of distance sampling to estimate population densities of large herbivores in Kruger National Park 

J. M. Kruger, B. K. Reilly and I. J. Whyte

pp. 371-376

  
 


Accuracy of some aerial survey estimators: contrasts with known numbers 

John P. Tracey, Peter J. S. Fleming and Gavin J. Melville

pp. 377-384

  
 


  
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