Integrating automated acoustic vocalization data and point count surveys for estimation of bird abundance

Abstract

Monitoring wildlife abundance across space and time is an essential task to study their population dynamics and inform effective management. Acoustic recording units are a promising technology for efficiently monitoring bird populations and communities. While current acoustic data models provide information on the presence/absence of individual species, new approaches are needed to monitor population abundance, ideally across large spatio‐temporal regions. We present an integrated modeling framework that combines high‐quality but temporally sparse bird point count survey data with acoustic recordings. Our models account for imperfect detection in both data types and false positive errors in the acoustic data. Using simulations, we compare the accuracy and precision of abundance estimates using differing amounts of acoustic vocalizations obtained from a clustering algorithm, point count data, and a subset of manually validated acoustic vocalizations. We also use our modeling framework in a case study to estimate abundance of the Eastern Wood‐Pewee (Contopus virens) in Vermont, U.S.A. The simulation study reveals that combining acoustic and point count data via an integrated model improves accuracy and precision of abundance estimates compared with models informed by either acoustic or point count data alone. Improved estimates are obtained across a wide‐range of scenarios, with the largest gains occurring when detection probability for the point count data is low. Combining acoustic data with only a small number of point count surveys yields estimates of abundance without the need for validating any of the identified vocalizations from the acoustic data. Within our case study, the integrated models provided moderate support for a decline of the Eastern Wood‐Pewee in this region. Our integrated modeling approach combines dense acoustic data with few point count surveys to deliver reliable estimates of species abundance without the need for manual identification of acoustic vocalizations or a prohibitively expensive large number of repeated point count surveys. Our proposed approach offers an efficient monitoring alternative for large spatio‐temporal regions when point count data are difficult to obtain or when monitoring is focused on rare species with low detection probability.

Publication
In: Methods in Ecology and Evolution https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210X.13578
Jeffrey W. Doser
Jeffrey W. Doser
Assistant Professor