Visual Head Counts: A Promising Method for Efficient Monitoring of Diamondback Terrapins

Determining the population status of the diamondback terrapin (<i>Malaclemys terrapin</i> spp.) is challenging due to their ecology and limitations associated with traditional sampling methods. Visual counting of emergent heads offers a promising, efficient, and non-invasive method for g...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Patricia Levasseur, Sean Sterrett, Chris Sutherland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-06-01
Series:Diversity
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/11/7/101
Description
Summary:Determining the population status of the diamondback terrapin (<i>Malaclemys terrapin</i> spp.) is challenging due to their ecology and limitations associated with traditional sampling methods. Visual counting of emergent heads offers a promising, efficient, and non-invasive method for generating abundance estimates of terrapin populations across broader spatial scales than has been achieved using capture&#8722;recapture, and can be used to quantify determinants of spatial variation in abundance. We conducted repeated visual head count surveys along the shoreline of Wellfleet Bay in Wellfleet, Massachusetts, and analyzed the count data using a hierarchical modeling framework designed specifically for repeated count data: the N-mixture model. This approach allows for simultaneous modeling of imperfect detection to generate estimates of true terrapin abundance. Detection probability was lowest when temperatures were coldest and when wind speed was highest. Local abundance was on average higher in sheltered sites compared to exposed sites and declined over the course of the sampling season. We demonstrate the utility of pairing visual head counts and N-mixture models as an efficient method for estimating terrapin abundance and show how the approach can be used to identifying environmental factors that influence detectability and distribution.
ISSN:1424-2818