2002
DOI: 10.1093/auk/119.1.46
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Landbird Counting Techniques: Current Practices and an Alternative

Abstract: Counting techniques are widely used to study and monitor terrestrial birds. To assess current applications of counting techniques, we reviewed landbird studies published 1989–1998 in nine major journals and one symposium. Commonly used techniques fell into two groups: procedures that used counts of bird detections as an index to abundance (index counts), and procedures that used empirical models of detectability to estimate density. Index counts rely upon assumptions concerning detectability that are difficult… Show more

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Cited by 216 publications
(219 citation statements)
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“…However, if the heaping effect occurred, it did not appear to have a great effect on inference about abundance, probably due to the relative length of our total time series compared to the three-year period during which heaping may have occurred. Nevertheless, our results support the recommendation of Rosenstock et al (2002) that when performing variable-distance circular point counts, an unlimited distance ring should be included even if the corresponding data are not used. Our results reinforce this recommendation regardless of whether distance sampling per se is the intended methodology.…”
Section: Detection Probabilitiessupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…However, if the heaping effect occurred, it did not appear to have a great effect on inference about abundance, probably due to the relative length of our total time series compared to the three-year period during which heaping may have occurred. Nevertheless, our results support the recommendation of Rosenstock et al (2002) that when performing variable-distance circular point counts, an unlimited distance ring should be included even if the corresponding data are not used. Our results reinforce this recommendation regardless of whether distance sampling per se is the intended methodology.…”
Section: Detection Probabilitiessupporting
confidence: 81%
“…If real, this heaping effect may be a good example of the potential for methodology to interact with observer psychology to result in misclassification of birds as being within the 100-m detection radius (Rosenstock et al 2002). However, if the heaping effect occurred, it did not appear to have a great effect on inference about abundance, probably due to the relative length of our total time series compared to the three-year period during which heaping may have occurred.…”
Section: Detection Probabilitiesmentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…Therefore, we established a simple analytical technique that extracts relative abundance of avian community size from bioacoustic recordings, and that is ready to be automated. Our analysis technique offers no quantifiable information on species composition and it does not account for differences in detection probabilities among species, habitats, or sampling periods (Rosenstock et al 2002). It may be suitable for detecting gross differences or changes in avian abundance when detection probabilities are constant.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%