Abstract

The use of line transect methodology and portable thermal imaging for ground survey of wildlife should require a good knowledge of the behavioural response of the animals to the presence of an observer, in order to take into account the potential bias in density estimate caused by deviation from the assumption that distances are recorded at the initial position. We used ten fallow deer and eight wild boar fitted with radiocollars to investigate animals’ response during simulated nocturnal line transect surveys, carried out in a Mediterranean plain forest. The experiment consisted in radiolocating a focal animal before and after an observer walked a transect nearby (<100 m). Each transect line was followed using a Global Positioning System (GPS) navigator. We carried out a total of 64 trials on fallow deer and 57 on wild boar. Results showed that despite most of the animals moved significantly in response to the observer (mean ± standard error, wild boar—95.3 ± 10.0 m; fallow deer—149.6 ± 14.2 m), the flying patterns were different in the two species: the reaction of fallow deer turned out to be more intense and directional with respect to that showed by wild boar. Although these results sound explorative, the experiment attempted here, for the first time, is relevant for an appropriate design of nocturnal distance-sampling surveys and gives information about potential bias arising from animal’s behavioural response. We believe that these first results may foster more in-deep analyses which are now made possible with the adoption of GPS technology for animal location.

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