4.2 Article

Passive Acoustic Monitoring of Chaco Chachalaca (Ortalis canicollis) Over a Year: Vocal Activity Pattern and Monitoring Recommendations

Journal

TROPICAL CONSERVATION SCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/19400829211058295

Keywords

cracidae; kaleidoscope; neotropics; pantanal; seasonality; vocal behavior; wildlife monitoring

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel SuperiorBrasil (CAPES) [01]
  2. Instituto Nacional de Ciencia e Tecnologia em Areas Umidas (INAU/UFMT/CNPq)
  3. Centro de Pesquisa do Pantanal (CPP)
  4. Brehm Funds for International Bird Conservation (BF), Bonn, Germany

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The declining Neotropical bird, Chaco Chachalaca, was monitored using passive acoustic monitoring and automated signal recognition software for the first time. The study revealed the vocal behavior of the species and proposed an acoustic monitoring protocol. The species was found to be vocally active throughout the day and night, with breeding season occurring in the last months of the dry season in the Brazilian Pantanal.
Chaco Chachalaca (Ortalis canicollis) is a declining Neotropical bird, for which our current knowledge about its natural history is very limited. Here, we evaluated for first time the utility of passive acoustic monitoring, coupled with automated signal recognition software, to monitor the Chaco Chachalaca, described the vocal behavior of the species across the diel and seasonal cycle patterns, and proposed an acoustic monitoring protocol to minimize error in the estimation of the vocal activity rate. We recorded over a complete annual cycle at three sites in the Brazilian Pantanal. The species was detected on 99% of the monitoring days, proving that this technique is a reliable method for detecting the presence of the species. Chaco Chachalaca was vocally active throughout the day and night, but its diel activity pattern peaked between 0500 and 0900. The breeding season of Chaco Chachalaca in the Brazilian Pantanal, based on seasonal changes in vocal activity, seems to occur during the last months of the dry season, with a peak in vocal activity between August and October. Our results could guide future surveys aiming to detect the presence of the species, both using traditional or acoustic surveys, or to evaluate changes in population abundance using passive acoustic monitoring, for which recorders should be left in the field for a minimum period of nine days to obtain a low-error estimate of the vocal activity of the species. Our results suggest that passive acoustic monitoring might be useful, as a complementary tool to field studies, for monitoring other cracids, a family with several threatened species that are reluctant to human presence.

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