Abstract

BackgroundCarrizo Plain National Monument (San Joaquin Desert, California, USA) is home to many threatened and endangered species including the blunt-nosed leopard lizard (Gambelia sila). Vegetation is dominated by annual grasses, and shrubs such as Mormon tea (Ephedra californica), which is of relevance to our target species, the federally listed blunt-nosed leopard lizard, and likely also provides key ecosystem services. We used relatively nonintrusive camera traps, or trail cameras, to capture interactions between animals and these shrubs using a paired shrub-open deployment. Cameras were placed within the shrub understory and in open microhabitats at ground level to estimate animal activity and determine species presence.FindingsTwenty cameras were deployed from April 1st, 2015 to July 5th, 2015 at paired shrub-open microsites at three locations. Over 425,000 pictures were taken during this time, of which 0.4 % detected mammals, birds, insects, and reptiles including the blunt-nosed leopard lizard. Trigger rate was very high on the medium sensitivity camera setting in this desert ecosystem, and rates did not differ between microsites.ConclusionsCamera traps are an effective, less invasive survey method for collecting data on the presence or absence of desert animals in shrub and open microhabitats. A more extensive array of cameras within an arid region would thus be an effective tool to estimate the presence of desert animals and potentially detect habitat use patterns.

Highlights

  • Carrizo Plain National Monument is one of the largest remaining patches of San Joaquin Desert left within the Central Valley of California

  • A more extensive array of cameras within the Carrizo Plain National Monument could be an effective tool to estimate the presence of this species along with the presence of other animals

  • These ecosystems are essential to the recovery and survival of a suite of endangered, threatened, and sensitive species including the endangered San Joaquin kit fox, giant kangaroo rat, and blunt-nosed leopard lizard (Germano et al 2011, Germano et al 2009, Prugh et al 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

Conclusions: Motion sensor trail cameras are an effective, non-invasive alternative survey method for collecting data on presence/absence of desert animals. A more extensive array of cameras within the Carrizo Plain National Monument could be an effective tool to estimate the presence of this species along with the presence of other animals. San Luis Obispo County, endangered species, blunt-nosed leopard lizard, San Joaquin kit fox, shrub species, facilitation, Ephedra californica.

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