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Title
Are road-kills representative of wildlife community obtained from atlas data? |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/10451/49248 |
Date
2021 |
Author(s)
Quiles Tundidor, Pablo; Ascensão, Fernando; D'Amico, Marcello; Revilla, Eloy; Barrientos, Rafael |
Abstract
Systematic road-kill surveys are useful to study the impact of roads on wildlife. However, they
are time-and budget-consuming, so the use of non-systematic data in road ecology is currently
gaining popularity (for instance, by environmental consultants). Some data sources such as atlases
(i.e., compilations of species records from a given region), which can include non-systematic and
citizen-science data, can entail several intrinsic biases, mostly due to uneven sampling effort and
uneven species detectability. Here, we tested this prediction by verifying if data from the Spanish
Atlas of Terrestrial Mammals mirror the road-kill patterns obtained from our own systematic roadkill
surveys. We focused on the Mediterranean mesocarnivore guild due to its easy identification by
citizens involved in atlas-data collection. We tested if the relative abundance of each species, their
richness and diversity obtained from Atlas and our systematic surveys were related, using linear
models, while controlling for human population and road density (potentially confounding effects).
We further compared the patterns of species abundance obtained from both sources. Our results
highlight that road-kill patterns do not mirror the Atlas patterns for the three metrics evaluated.
This is probably due to survey biases in typical data from wildlife atlases. When analysing species
individually, we found that some species are road-killed more (or less) than expected in relation
to their abundance in atlas records. These results are probably due to species-specific ecological
or behavioural traits such as species morphology or species behaviour when facing the road. We
suggest that abundance from atlas data should not be used as a proxy for road-kill rates. - info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion |
Subject(s)
citizen science; carnivores; Atlas data; Road ecology; wildlife-vehicle collisions |
Language
eng |
Publisher
Associazione Teriologica Italiana |
Relation
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/POR_NORTE/SFRH%2FBPD%2F115968%2F2016/PT; info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/CEEC IND 2017/CEECIND%2F03798%2F2017%2FCP1423%2FCT0015/PT; http://www.italian-journal-of-mammalogy.it/Are-road-kills-representative-of-wildlife-community-obtained-from-atlas-data-,134521,0,2.html |
Type of publication
article |
Rights
openAccess; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ |
Identifier
Quiles Tundidor, P., Ascensão, F., D'Amico, M., Revilla, E., Barrientos, R. (2021). Are road-kills representative of wildlife community obtained from atlas data?. Hystrix, the Italian Journal of Mammalogy, 32(1), 89-94. https://doi.org/10.4404/hystrix-00396-2020; 1825-5272; 10.4404/hystrix-00396-2020 |
Repository
Lissabon - University of Lissabon
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Added to C-A: 2021-08-12;08:07:08 |
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