4.7 Article

Trade-offs in initial and long-term handling efficiency of PIT-tag and photographic identification methods

Journal

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
Volume 130, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.108110

Keywords

Amphibian; Capture-recapture; Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem; Marking; Rocky Mountain National Park; Stress

Funding

  1. Colorado State University Department of Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology

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Individual identification is crucial for long-term studies, but minimizing handling time is important to reduce impacts on populations. Researchers need to weigh the tradeoff between initial and subsequent handling times to design effective marking strategies.
Individual identification is required for long-term investigations that examine population-level changes in survival or abundance, and mechanisms associated with these changes in wild populations. Such identification generally requires the application of a unique mark, or the documentation of characteristics distinctive to each individual animal. To minimize impacts to often declining populations, scientific and ethical concerns encourage marking strategies that minimize handling time (i.e., stress) for captured individuals. We examined the relative efficacy of passive integrated transponder (PIT)-tagging and photo-identification to identify individual Boreal toads (Anaxyrus boreas boreas) in field and indoor settings. We evaluated whether initial handling time was influenced by identification method (PIT-tag or photo-identification) or environment (field or indoor) and assessed the applicability of each method in long-term monitoring programs. Initial handling time was higher for PIT-tagging than photo-identification and higher in the field than in an indoor environment; however, handling time for previously PIT-tagged individuals was greatly reduced such that photo-identification led to > 5.5 times more handling time than PIT-tagging over the course of a toad's lifetime. Investigators must determine the tradeoff between initial and subsequent handling times to minimize the expected (mean) cumulative handling time for an individual over the course of a study. Cumulative handling time is a function of the study design and the species' survival and detection probabilities. We developed a Shiny Application to allow investigators to determine the identification method that minimizes handling time for their own study system.

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