Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17855
Título: Rare or elusive? A test of expert knowledge about rarity of Amazon forest birds
Autor: Campos-Cerqueira, Marconi
Cohn-Haft, Mario
Vargas, Claudeir Ferreira
Nader, Carlos E.
Andretti, Christian Borges
Costa, Thiago Vernaschi Vieira da
Sberze, Monica
Hines, James E.
Ferraz, Gonçalo
Palavras-chave: Bird
Detection Method
Knowledge
Maximum Likelihood Analysis
Probability
Rainforest
Rare Species
Rarity
Sampling
Temporal Variation
Amazonas
Aves
Data do documento: 2013
Revista: Diversity and Distributions
É parte de: Volume 19, Número 7, Pags. 710-721
Abstract: Aim: To offer a test of expert knowledge about rarity of twenty Amazon forest bird species following an approach that equates rarity with low site occupancy and formally accounts for imperfect species detection. We define ten pairs of closely related species, each pair with one hypothetically common and one hypothetically rare species. Our null hypothesis is that members of each pair have similar occupancy, with hypothesized differences due to detection errors alone. Location: A 1000-ha plot of primary rainforest in the central Brazilian Amazon. Methods: We visited each of 55 sampling sites multiple times per season for three field seasons and estimated the probability of site occupancy by each species following a maximum likelihood state-space approach that also estimates the probability that a species is present yet undetected at a site. To maximize detection and account for its variation, we employed three different sampling techniques while systematically training and testing observer's ability to recognize species. Results: Occupancy estimates agree with expert predictions in all but two species pairs and show no evidence of clear temporal variation in occupancy between sampling seasons. Detection probability had a positive relation with observer ability, a strong relation to time of day across species, and a strong relation with the use of playback for some species. Detection with point counts and with autonomous recorders varied between species pairs. Main conclusions: We reject the null hypothesis of equal occupancy within pairs, concluding that expert knowledge on species rarity is useful and worth eliciting. Our results replace qualitative ratings of rarity with statistical estimates of occupancy, establishing a reliable baseline for future comparisons. Besides illustrating the relevance of expert knowledge, this application to Amazonian birds illustrates a flexible approach that can be used for testing knowledge about rarity for a variety of species groups and spatial scales. © 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
DOI: 10.1111/ddi.12033
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