| Literature DB >> 30280021 |
Thomas D Gable1, Steve K Windels1,2, Joseph K Bump1.
Abstract
Locating wolf (Canis lupus) homesites is valuable for understanding the foraging behavior, population dynamics, and reproductive ecology of wolves during summer. During this period wolf pack members (adults and pups) readily respond to simulated wolf howls (i.e., howl surveys), which allows researchers to estimate the location of the homesite via triangulation. Confirming the actual locations of homesites via ground truthing is labor intensive because of the error surrounding estimated locations. Our objectives were (1) to quantify observer error during howl surveys and compare amongst experience levels, (2) provide a simple method for locating homesites in the field by incorporating observer error, and (3) further document the value of this method for monitoring wolf packs throughout the summer. We located 17 homesites by howl surveys during 2015-2017 in the Greater Voyageurs Ecosystem, Minnesota, USA. Of 62 bearings taken by observers during howl surveys, bearings erred by an average of 7.6° ± 6.3° (SD). There was no difference in observer error between novice and experienced observers. A simple way to increase efficiency when searching for homesites is to search concentric areas (bands) based on estimated observer error, specifically by: (1) adding ±10° error bands around howl survey bearings when ≥3 bearings can be obtained, (2) ±10° and ±20° error bands when 2 bearings are obtained, and (3) ±10° and ±26° error bands when 1 bearing is obtained. By incorporating observer error and understanding how frequently and how far wolves move homesites, it is possible to monitor wolf packs and confirm most, if not all, homesites used by a pack from at least June until August without having a collared individual in a pack.Entities:
Keywords: Acoustic surveys; Acoustic triangulation; Canis lupus; Observer error; Predator; Rendezvous site; Triangulation; Voyageurs National Park; Wolf den; Wolf pups
Year: 2018 PMID: 30280021 PMCID: PMC6166618 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.5629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Examples of how incorporating observer error in howl surveys helps focus the search area, and presumably the time spent searching for, wolf homesites (black star).
Observer error is the difference (in degrees) between an observer’s estimated bearing (solid black arrows) of a wolf response and the true bearing of the homesite. When one bearing is obtained (A), the observer estimates how close the response is (close, medium, far) and then incorporates ±10° and ±26° error (dashed black lines) around their bearing to determine an area that likely contains the homesite. When two bearings are obtained (B), incorporating ±10° and ±20° error around observer bearings creates two polygons: a smaller 10°-error polygon (dark gray, solid outline) that will commonly contain the homesite and a larger 20° -polygon (light gray, dashed outline) that almost certainly contains the homesite. When at least three bearings are obtained (C), incorporating ±10° error around observer bearings will create an error polygon that almost certainly contains the site.
Figure 2The relationship between observer error and distance (m) from homesites when conducting howl surveys of wolf homesites during June-August in the Greater Voyageurs Ecosystem.
Observer error is the difference (in degrees) between an observer’s estimated bearing of a wolf response and the true bearing of the homesite. The solid blue line represents the quadratic relationship between observer error and distance from homesites and the shaded region represents the 95% confidence interval.