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Methods for monitoring tiger and pre...
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Karanth, K. Ullas.
Methods for monitoring tiger and prey populations
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Methods for monitoring tiger and prey populationsedited by K. Ullas Karanth, James D. Nichols.
其他作者:
Karanth, K. Ullas.
出版者:
Singapore :Springer Singapore :2017.
面頁冊數:
xxvii, 303 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
Contained By:
Springer eBooks
標題:
TigerMonitoring.
電子資源:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-5436-5
ISBN:
9789811054365$q(electronic bk.)
Methods for monitoring tiger and prey populations
Methods for monitoring tiger and prey populations
[electronic resource] /edited by K. Ullas Karanth, James D. Nichols. - Singapore :Springer Singapore :2017. - xxvii, 303 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
Chapter 1. Role of Monitoring in Global Tiger Conservation -- Chapter 2. Tiger Ecology in Relation to Monitoring Issues -- Chapter 3. Animal Population Monitoring: A Unified Conceptual Framework -- Chapter 4. Concepts: Assessing Tiger Habitat Occupancy Dynamics -- Chapter 5. Field Practices: Assessing Tiger Habitat Occupancy Dynamics -- Chapter 6. Concepts: Estimating Abundance of Prey Species Using Line Transect Sampling -- Chapter 7. Field Practices: Estimating Abundance of Prey Species Using Line Transect Sampling -- Chapter 8. Concepts and Practices: Estimating Abundance of Prey Species Using Hierarchical Model-Based Approaches -- Chapter 9. Concepts: Assessing Tiger Population Dynamics Using Capture-Recapture Sampling -- Chapter 10. Field Practices: Assessing Tiger Population Dynamics Using Photographic Captures -- Chapter 11. Concepts and Practices: Assessing Tiger Population Dynamics Using Genetic Captures -- Chapter 12. Concepts: Integrating Population Survey Data from Different Spatial Scales, Sampling Methods and Species -- Chapter 13. Concepts and Practices: Assessing Landscape Connectivity for Tigers and Prey Species -- Chapter 14. Informed Decision Processes for Tiger Conservation. A Vision for the Future.
This book addresses issues of monitoring populations of tigers, ungulate prey species and habitat occupancy, with relevance to similar assessments of large mammal species and general biodiversity. It covers issues of rigorous sampling, modeling, estimation and adaptive management of animal populations using cutting-edge tools, such as camera-traps, genetic identification and Geographic Information Systems (GIS), applied under the modern statistical approach of Bayesian and likelihood-based inference. Of special focus here are animal survey data derived for use under spatial capture-recapture, occupancy, distance sampling, mixture-modeling and connectivity analysees. Because tigers are an icons of global conservation, in last five decades,enormous amounts of commitment and resources have been invested by tiger range countries and the conservation community for saving wild tigers. However, status of the big cat remains precarious. Rigorous monitoring of surviving wild tiger populations continues to be essential for both understanding and recovering wild tigers. However, many tiger monitoring programs lack the necessary rigor to generate the reliable results. While the deployment of technologies, analyses, computing power and human-resource investments in tiger monitoring have greatly progressed in the last couple of decades, a full comprehension of their correct deployment has not kept pace in practice. In this volume, Dr. Ullas Karanth and Dr. James Nichols, world leaders in tiger biology and quantitative ecology, respectively, address this key challenge. The have collaborated with an extraordinary array of 30 scientists with expertise in a range of necessary disciplines - biology and ecology of tigers, prey and habitats; advanced statistical theory and practice; computation and programming; practical field-sampling methods that employ technologies as varied as camera traps, genetic analyses and geographic information systems. The book is a 'tour de force' of cutting-edge methodologies for assessing not just tigers but also other predators and their prey. The 14 chapters here are lucidly presented in a coherent sequence to provide tiger-specific answers to fundamental questions in animal population assessment: why monitor, what to monitor and how to monitor. While highlighting robust methods, the authors also clearly point out those that are in use, but unreliable. The managerial dimension of tiger conservation described here, the task of matching monitoring objectives with skills and resources to integrate tiger conservation under an adaptive framework, also renders this volume useful to wildlife scientists as well as conservationists.
ISBN: 9789811054365$q(electronic bk.)
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-981-10-5436-5doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
794400
Tiger
--Monitoring.
LC Class. No.: QL737.C23
Dewey Class. No.: 599.756
Methods for monitoring tiger and prey populations
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This book addresses issues of monitoring populations of tigers, ungulate prey species and habitat occupancy, with relevance to similar assessments of large mammal species and general biodiversity. It covers issues of rigorous sampling, modeling, estimation and adaptive management of animal populations using cutting-edge tools, such as camera-traps, genetic identification and Geographic Information Systems (GIS), applied under the modern statistical approach of Bayesian and likelihood-based inference. Of special focus here are animal survey data derived for use under spatial capture-recapture, occupancy, distance sampling, mixture-modeling and connectivity analysees. Because tigers are an icons of global conservation, in last five decades,enormous amounts of commitment and resources have been invested by tiger range countries and the conservation community for saving wild tigers. However, status of the big cat remains precarious. Rigorous monitoring of surviving wild tiger populations continues to be essential for both understanding and recovering wild tigers. However, many tiger monitoring programs lack the necessary rigor to generate the reliable results. While the deployment of technologies, analyses, computing power and human-resource investments in tiger monitoring have greatly progressed in the last couple of decades, a full comprehension of their correct deployment has not kept pace in practice. In this volume, Dr. Ullas Karanth and Dr. James Nichols, world leaders in tiger biology and quantitative ecology, respectively, address this key challenge. The have collaborated with an extraordinary array of 30 scientists with expertise in a range of necessary disciplines - biology and ecology of tigers, prey and habitats; advanced statistical theory and practice; computation and programming; practical field-sampling methods that employ technologies as varied as camera traps, genetic analyses and geographic information systems. The book is a 'tour de force' of cutting-edge methodologies for assessing not just tigers but also other predators and their prey. The 14 chapters here are lucidly presented in a coherent sequence to provide tiger-specific answers to fundamental questions in animal population assessment: why monitor, what to monitor and how to monitor. While highlighting robust methods, the authors also clearly point out those that are in use, but unreliable. The managerial dimension of tiger conservation described here, the task of matching monitoring objectives with skills and resources to integrate tiger conservation under an adaptive framework, also renders this volume useful to wildlife scientists as well as conservationists.
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