Hi all
My colleagues and I are pleased to announce the publication of our new article 
in the Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022098117303623?dgcid=author
[https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S0022098120X00037-cov150h.gif]<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022098117303623?dgcid=author>
Observer performance and the effect of ambiguous taxon identification for fixed 
strip-width dugong aerial 
surveys<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022098117303623?dgcid=author>
Aerial survey methods for census of wildlife populations are widely used to 
manage species. There has been considerable research to develop methods to…
www.sciencedirect.com
Abstract: Aerial survey methods for census of wildlife populations are widely 
used to manage species. There has been considerable research to develop methods 
to cope with imperfect detection during aerial surveys, however 
misidentification remains an unresolved but significant issue. Using data from 
a comprehensive dugong aerial survey of the coastline of the Northern 
Territory, Australia, we assessed the influence of observer, sighting and 
environmental variables on probabilities of both observers in double-count, 
dual-observer teams detecting dugongs and dolphins (‘duplicate sighting 
probability’), the confidence with which observers could distinguish between 
dugongs and dolphins, and the reliability of post-detection observations by 
comparing data between observers. Dolphin duplicate sighting probability varied 
dependent on group size, Beaufort sea state and the lateral position inside the 
strip-width transect in relation to the aircraft. Dugong duplicate sighting 
probability varied across dual-observer teams. Counts of individuals in dugong 
and dolphin groups were unreliable past ≈5 individuals. Observer confidence in 
taxon identification varied by individual observer and throughout the duration 
of the survey (dolphin sightings) and potentially by the lateral position 
inside the transect strip-width in relation to the aircraft (dugong sightings). 
The probability of taxon identification disagreement between observers for 
duplicate dugong and dolphin sightings varied with group size, and markedly if 
one observer was uncertain (i.e. not 100% confident) of their assigned taxon. 
We believe this is predominately due to the presence of Australian snubfin 
dolphins (Orcaella heinsohni) in the survey area, which look like dugongs when 
seen from a distance, momentarily. We further show that application of 
different data filtering scenarios for uncertain taxonomic identifications and 
taxon identification disagreements between dual observers produces highly 
variable estimates of observer-specific dugong detection probability (ranging 
from 0.26 to 0.80 in a single observer) and dugong abundance (x̅ ± S.D., 40% ± 
25%: difference between highest and lowest estimate, relative to the lowest 
estimate, across different data filtering scenarios). These results are 
particularly relevant not only to researchers conducting dugong aerial surveys, 
but also for other marine mammal aerial surveys in passing mode that target 
sympatric, morphologically similar species. We recommend development of 
operating procedures and analytical methods to quantify and adjust for 
misidentification and uncertain taxon identifications.


Thanks
Rachel

Rachel Groom
CDU-AIMS Fellowship

College of Indigenous Futures, Arts & Society
NORTHERN INSTITUTE <http://www.cdu.edu.au/northern-institute>
T: +61 8 8946 7136
E: [email protected]<mailto:%[email protected]>
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Northern Institute acknowledges the traditional owners and custodians across
the lands on which we live and work and we pay our respects to elders both past 
and present.
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