Using decoys and camera traps to estimate depredation rates and neonate survival
Hailey M. Boone,
Krishna Pacifici,
Christopher E. Moorman
et al.
Abstract:Ungulate neonates—individuals less than four weeks old—typically experience the greatest predation rates, and variation in their survival can influence ungulate population dynamics. Typical methods to measure neonate survival involve capture and radio-tracking of adults and neonates to discover mortality events. This type of fieldwork is invasive and expensive, can bias results if it leads to neonate abandonment, and may still have high uncertainty about the predator species involved. Here we explore the poten… Show more
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