Copyright for articles published in this journal is retained by the journal.
Author Biographies
RA Fuller
School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia
P Akite
Institute of Environmental and Natural Resources, Makerere University, PO Box 10066, Kampala, Uganda
JB Amuno
Institute of Environmental and Natural Resources, Makerere University, PO Box 10066, Kampala, Uganda
CL Fuller
School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia
JM Ofwono
Institute of Environmental and Natural Resources, Makerere University, PO Box 10066, Kampala, Uganda
G Proaktor
Division of Biology, Imperial College London, Silwood Park Campus, Manor House, Buckhurst Road, Ascot, SL5 7PY, UK
R Ssemmanda
Institute of Environmental and Natural Resources, Makerere University, PO Box 10066, Kampala, Uganda
Main Article Content
Using playback of vocalisations to survey the Nahan’s francolin, a threatened African forest galliform
RA Fuller
P Akite
JB Amuno
CL Fuller
JM Ofwono
G Proaktor
R Ssemmanda
Abstract
Methods using playback of vocalisations have been widely used to survey elusive birds. Most of these methods suffer from the drawback that movement of birds is often elicited by the sound stimulus used, violating assumptions of distance sampling and generating unknown biases in resulting density estimates. Using playback survey data for a globally threatened forest galliform bird in Uganda, we found evidence of strong movement of birds toward the sound stimulus during playback surveys, and demonstrate that this caused a significant overestimation of bird density. We present a simple regression-based method for identifying and correcting this bias that is statistically robust and practical to implement for those surveying elusive forest birds. Based on our adjusted survey data, we estimate that about 40 000 Nahan’s Francolins remain in Uganda.
OSTRICH 2012, 83(1): 1–6
Donate
AJOL is a Non Profit Organisation that cannot function without donations.
AJOL and the millions of African and international researchers who rely on our free services are deeply grateful for your contribution.
AJOL is annually audited and was also independently assessed in 2019 by E&Y.
Your donation is guaranteed to directly contribute to Africans sharing their research output with a global readership.
Once off donations here:
For annual AJOL Supporter contributions, please view our Supporters page.
Tell us what you think and showcase the impact of your research!
Please take 5 minutes to contribute to our survey so that we can better understand the contribution that African research makes to global and African development challenges. Share your feedback to help us make sure that AJOL's services support and amplify the voices of researchers like you.