An academic publishing model in which journals do not charge fees to either authors or readers.

Average time for first decision (excluding desk-rejections): 5 weeks

Animal Biodiversity and Conservation. Volume 35.2 (2012) Pages: 285-293

Aerial ungulate surveys with a combination of infrared and high–resolution natural colour images

Franke, U., Goll, B., Hohmann, U., Heurich, M.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.32800/abc.2012.35.0285

Download

PDF

Abstract

Information on animal population sizes is crucial for wildlife management. In aerial surveys, we used a silent light aircraft (microlight) and a combination of a computer–linked thermal infrared camera (640 x 480 pixels) to detect ungulates and high–resolution visual images (5,616 x 3,744 pixels) to identify specific species. From winter 2008/2009 to winter 2010/2011, we flew 48 missions over three German national parks and a German/ French biosphere reserve. Within each study area, we followed non–overlapping linear transects with a flying altitude ~450 m above ground level and scanned 1,500–2,000 ha every two hours of flight time. Animals best detected and identified were red deer and fallow deer. Detection rates with respect to the type and density of vegetation cover ranged from 0% (young spruce) to 75% (young defoliated beech) to 100% (open land). This non–invasive method is cost–effective and suitable for many landscapes.

Keywords

Aerial survey, Infrared camera, Microlight aircraft, Ungulates, Wildlife monitoring

Cite

Franke, U., Goll, B., Hohmann, U., Heurich, M., 2012. Aerial ungulate surveys with a combination of infrared and high–resolution natural colour images. Animal Biodiversity and Conservation, 35: 285-293, DOI: https://doi.org/10.32800/abc.2012.35.0285

Reception date:

15/01/2012

Acceptation date:

31/08/2012

Publication date:

06/11/2012

Share

Visits

2606

Downloads

855

Content appears on: