Abstract

The increasing demand for robust marine bird abundance and distribution assessments coupled with technological advances has led to the development of digital survey techniques for birds. Although digital surveys for bird monitoring are becoming a standard method in some countries, their strengths and weaknesses and comparability with traditional visual surveys remain insufficiently documented and understood. Aiming to improve existing knowledge on digital video monitoring techniques, we conducted one parallel digital video survey with 2-cm ground resolution and a 544-m swath flown at 549 m and an aerial visual survey flown at 76 m over the southern Baltic Sea in March 2015. We assessed bird sighting rates, identification rates, observed densities, and model-based abundance estimates. The digital survey covered a larger area through direct registrations, provided higher numbers of bird sightings and identified species, and higher spatial accuracy than the visual survey. Overall species identification rates were similar between the survey methods; however, there were marked differences among bird taxonomic groups: more individuals were identified to species level in the digital survey dataset for the majority of taxonomic groups, except for grebes and auks. These advantages supplement other previously identified benefits of digital aerial surveys, such as the elimination of bird disturbance due to high flight altitude, reduced observer bias, and availability of raw data for quality assurance. Furthermore, higher numbers of direct bird sightings at a higher spatial resolution during digital surveys ensure better statistical analyses, including distribution modelling, of more species for the same survey effort.

Highlights

  • Marine birds are notoriously difficult to survey due to their widespread and heterogeneous distributions in often difficult to access environments

  • Digital video surveys were compared with ship surveys conducted off the mid-Atlantic coast of the US, and the results showed that more birds were observed and identified to species level from ships, except for scoters (Melanitta spp.) where identification rates were higher for digital surveys (Williams et al 2015)

  • In total 34 marine bird species were identified in the video footage of the digital survey and 19 species were identified during the aerial visual survey (Table S1)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Marine birds are notoriously difficult to survey due to their widespread and heterogeneous distributions in often difficult to access environments. The development of digital video and photo technologies opens a new field of survey methods to study numbers and distributions of seabirds and other marine animals. Recent developments in digital technologies allow high resolution on a scale of a few centimetres from high flight altitudes. It is presumed that digital survey techniques will improve the accuracy and overall quality of seabird surveys (Buckland et al 2012). Digital aerial surveys have already been established as a standard monitoring method for marine birds in some countries, e.g. UK and Germany [Bundesamt für Seeschifffahrt und Hydrographie (BSH) 2013]. Up until now there have been few comparative studies, and how digital video surveys compare with traditional visual aerial surveys remains sparsely documented in the primary literature

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call