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Article

A first test of the thread bobbin tracking technique as a method for studying the ecology of herpetofauna in a tropical rainforest

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Citation

Waddell E, Whitworth A & Macleod R (2016) A first test of the thread bobbin tracking technique as a method for studying the ecology of herpetofauna in a tropical rainforest. Herpetological Conservation and Biology, 11 (1), pp. 61-71. http://www.herpconbio.org/Volume_11/Issue_1/Waddell_etal_2016.pdf

Abstract
The lack of information about amphibians and reptiles in highly threatened tropical rainforest habitats has led to a need for innovative methods that can rapidly generate data on ecological behavior. The thread bobbin technique has proven successful for gathering ecological information in a range of habitats, but has not yet been used in tropical rainforests. Here we test the method for the first time in a humid tropical forest habitat on 14 herpetofaunal species. We found thread bobbins to be effective for large anurans (one leptodactylid and one bufonid), medium-large terrestrial snakes (one boid, three colubrids and one viperid), and testudines (one chelid), but largely unsuccessful for arboreal snakes (one boid and one colubrid), small and slender snakes (two colubrids), and small anurans (one strabomantid). We tracked 18 individuals for 1.2-15 d (mean 4.6 d) for distances of 5.5-469.3 m (mean 159.2 m). The thread trail revealed the exact movements of the tracked animal, providing detailed information on activity and microhabitat use that many alternative tracking methods cannot provide. Conservation projects rely heavily upon understanding the life history of species and without this prior knowledge, conservation efforts can fail, wasting funds and resources. We show that the thread bobbin method is a cost-effective technique that can be used to rapidly gather detailed ecological information on the life history of relatively unknown rainforest reptiles and amphibians.

Keywords
activity; amphibians; life-history traits; microhabitat use; rapid ecological surveys; reptiles

Journal
Herpetological Conservation and Biology: Volume 11, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date30/04/2016
Publication date online30/04/2016
Date accepted by journal03/01/2016
URL
Publisher URL
ISSN1931-7603

People (1)

Dr Emily Waddell

Dr Emily Waddell

Post Doctoral Research Fellow, Biological and Environmental Sciences

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