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Large‐scale and long‐term wildlife research and monitoring using camera traps: a continental synthesis

Title: Large‐scale and long‐term wildlife research and monitoring using camera traps: a continental synthesis
Authors: Tom Bruce; Zachary Amir; Benjamin L Allen; Brendan F Alting; Matt Amos; John Augusteyn; Guy‐Anthony Ballard; Linda M Behrendorff; Kristian Bell; Andrew J Bengsen; Ami Bennett; Joe S Benshemesh; Joss Bentley; Caroline J Blackmore; Remo Boscarino‐Gaetano; Lachlan A Bourke; Rob Brewster; Barry W Brook; Colin Broughton; Jessie C Buettel; Andrew Carter; Antje Chiu‐Werner; Andrew W Claridge; Sarah Comer; Sebastien Comte; Rod M Connolly; Mitchell A Cowan; Sophie L Cross; Calum X Cunningham; Anastasia H Dalziell; Hugh F Davies; Jenny Davis; Stuart J Dawson; Julian Di Stefano; Christopher R Dickman; Martin L Dillon; Tim S Doherty; Michael M Driessen; Don Driscoll; Shannon J Dundas; Anne C Eichholtzer; Todd F Elliott; Peter Elsworth; Bronwyn A Fancourt; Loren L Fardell; James Faris; Adam Fawcett; Diana O Fisher; Peter JS Fleming; David M Forsyth; Alejandro D Garza‐Garcia; William L Geary; Graeme Gillespie; Patrick J Giumelli; Ana Gracanin; Hedley S Grantham; Aaron C Greenville; Stephen R Griffiths; Heidi Groffen; David G Hamilton; Lana Harriott; Matthew W Hayward; Geoffrey Heard; Jaime Heiniger; Kristofer M Helgen; Tim J Henderson; Lorna Hernandez‐Santin; Cesar Herrera; Ben T Hirsch; Rosemary Hohnen; Tracey A Hollings; Conrad J Hoskin; Bronwyn A Hradsky; Jacinta E Humphrey; Paul R Jennings; Menna E Jones; Neil R Jordan; Catherine L Kelly; Malcolm S Kennedy; Monica L Knipler; Tracey L Kreplins; Kiara L L'Herpiniere; William F Laurance; Tyrone H Lavery; Mark Le Pla; Lily Leahy; Ashley Leedman; Sarah Legge; Ana V Leitão; Mike Letnic; Michael J Liddell; Zoë E Lieb; Grant D Linley; Allan T Lisle; Cheryl A Lohr; Natalya Maitz; Kieran D Marshall; Rachel Therese Mason; Daniela F Matheus‐Holland; Leo B McComb; Peter J McDonald; Hugh McGregor; Donald T McKnight; Paul D Meek; Vishnu Menon; Damian R Michael; Charlotte H Mills; Vivianna Miritis; Harry A Moore; Helen R Morgan; Brett P Murphy; Andrew J Murray; Daniel JD Natusch; Heather Neilly; Paul Nevill; Peggy Newman; Thomas M Newsome; Dale G Nimmo; Eric J Nordberg; Terence W O'Dwyer; Sally O'Neill; Julie M Old; Katherine Oxenham; Matthew D Pauza; Ange Pestell; Benjamin J Pitcher; Christopher A Pocknee; Hugh P Possingham; Keren G Raiter; Jacquie S Rand; Matthew W Rees; Anthony Rendall; Juanita Renwick; April Reside; Miranda Rew‐Duffy; Euan Ritchie; Chris P Roach; Alan Robley; Stefanie M Rog; Tracy M Rout; Thomas A Schlacher; Cyril R Scomparin; Holly Sitters; Deane A Smith; Ruchira Somaweera; Emma E Spencer; Rebecca E Spindler; Alyson M Stobo‐Wilson; Danielle Stokeld; Louise M Streeting; Duncan R Sutherland; Patrick L Taggart; Daniella Teixeira; Graham G Thompson; Scott A Thompson; Mary O Thorpe; Stephanie J Todd; Alison L Towerton; Karl Vernes; Grace Waller; Glenda M Wardle; Darcy J Watchorn; Alexander WT Watson; Justin A Welbergen; Mike Weston; Baptiste J Wijas; Stephen E Williams; Luke P Woodford; Eamonn IF Wooster; Elizabeth Znidersic; Matthew S Luskin
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: Biological sciences; Australia; big data; biodiversity conservation; data sharing; occupancy modelling; sampling methods; terrestrial vertebrates
Description: Camera traps are widely used in wildlife research and monitoring, so it is imperative to understand their strengths, limitations, and potential for increasing impact. We investigated a decade of use of wildlife cameras (2012–2022) with a case study on Australian terrestrial vertebrates using a multifaceted approach. We (i) synthesised information from a literature review; (ii) conducted an online questionnaire of 132 professionals; (iii) hosted an in‐person workshop of 28 leading experts representing academia, non‐governmental organisations (NGOs), and government; and (iv) mapped camera trap usage based on all sources. We predicted that the last decade would have shown: (i) exponentially increasing sampling effort, a continuation of camera usage trends up to 2012; (ii) analytics to have shifted from naive presence/absence and capture rates towards hierarchical modelling that accounts for imperfect detection, thereby improving the quality of outputs and inferences on occupancy, abundance, and density; and (iii) broader research scales in terms of multi‐species, multi‐site and multi‐year studies. However, the results showed that the sampling effort has reached a plateau, with publication rates increasing only modestly. Users reported reaching a saturation point in terms of images that could be processed by humans and time for complex analyses and academic writing. There were strong taxonomic and geographic biases towards medium–large mammals (>500 g) in forests along Australia's southeastern coastlines, reflecting proximity to major cities. Regarding analytical choices, bias‐prone indices still accounted for ~50% of outputs and this was consistent across user groups. Multi‐species, multi‐site and multiple‐year studies were rare, largely driven by hesitancy around collaboration and data sharing. There is no widely used repository for wildlife camera images and the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) is the dominant repository for sharing tabular occurrence records. However, the ALA is presence‐only and thus ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: unknown
Relation: 10779/DRO/DU:28254290.v3; https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Large_scale_and_long_term_wildlife_research_and_monitoring_using_camera_traps_a_continental_synthesis/28254290
Availability: https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Large_scale_and_long_term_wildlife_research_and_monitoring_using_camera_traps_a_continental_synthesis/28254290
Rights: CC BY 4.0
Accession Number: edsbas.2C6F9F7B
Database: BASE