Abstract

BackgroundMeasuring the size of free roaming dog populations quickly and accurately is critical in the implementation of numerous preventive health and population control interventions. However, few studies have investigated the relative performance of population size assessment tools when applied to dogs. The aim of this study was to compare the commonly used mark-resight methodology with distance sampling methods, which are less resource intensive, to estimate free-roaming dog abundance in Goa, India.Twenty-six working zones were surveyed along all roads twice by the same surveyor at the same time of day, following a vaccination campaign which included marking of vaccinated dogs with a coloured paint. The Chapman estimate was then used to evaluate the mark-resight abundance. Additionally, the number of dogs and perpendicular distance from the road for all dogs sighted was recorded. This was used to estimate dog density and abundance using distance sampling methods. The detection function was fitted based on goodness-of-fit and AIC.ResultsThe Chapman abundance estimate for the entire study area was 5202 dogs (95%CI 4733.8–5671.0), and the distance sampling method abundance estimate was 5067 dogs (95%CI 4454.3–5764.2). For individual working zones, after taking other factors into account in a mixed effects model, the average distance sampling estimate was 35% higher (95%CI 20–53%) than the Chapman estimate. There was also evidence of a difference in estimates between surveyors of 21% (95%CI 7–37%) and between days (22% lower on day 2, 95%CI 8–38%) for individual working zones.ConclusionOur study demonstrated that the distance sampling estimates were comparable overall to the Chapman method of abundance estimation of free roaming dogs across the entire study region but there was noticeable variation between the two methods when individual zones were compared. Consequently, distance sampling methods may be suitable to enumerate dogs over large areas in a more time efficient manner than the widely used mark-resight approach.

Highlights

  • Measuring the size of free roaming dog populations quickly and accurately is critical in the implementation of numerous preventive health and population control interventions

  • The number of dogs counted in each working zone was small on average, and the proportion of marked dogs and corresponding Chapman estimate, would be heavily influenced by this, which is a major limitation of this study

  • As this study only looked at free-roaming dogs, a household survey would be needed in any case for a complete picture of the dog population

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Summary

Introduction

Measuring the size of free roaming dog populations quickly and accurately is critical in the implementation of numerous preventive health and population control interventions. The aim of this study was to compare the commonly used mark-resight methodology with distance sampling methods, which are less resource intensive, to estimate free-roaming dog abundance in Goa, India. The World Society for the Protection of Animals, and the Rabies Blueprint produce survey guidelines for measuring the abundance of dogs and vaccination coverage after a rabies vaccination campaign [8, 9]. These include door-to-door surveys, sampling, indicator counts, and capture-mark-recapture methods. Methods looking at absolute abundance are time and resource intensive and this can limit their use for regular population studies [10]. Abundance estimates can be used to calculate vaccination coverage as a measure of effectiveness of the interventions

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