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Detections of burros from helicopter aerial surveys in the southwestern US, 2016-2018

Dates

Publication Date
Time Period
2016-01-20
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2016-01-21
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2016-03-04
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2016-03-05
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2016-06-15
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2016-06-16
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2017-02-02
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2017-02-03
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2017-02-04
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2017-05-12
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2017-05-13
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2017-06-20
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2017-06-21
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2017-06-22
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2017-06-23
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2017-10-11
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2017-10-12
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2017-10-13
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2017-10-30
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2017-10-31
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2018-10-12
Time Period
2018-10-13

Citation

Schoenecker, K.A., Hennig, J.D., Cain, J.W., and Roemer, G.W., 2022, Detections of burros from helicopter aerial surveys in the southwestern US, 2016-2018: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9OAEATC.

Summary

Feral burros (Equus asinus) and horses (E. ferus caballus) inhabiting public land in the western United States are intended to be managed at population levels established to promote a thriving, natural ecological balance. Like many large ungulate populations, management agencies employ aerial surveys to obtain estimates of horse and burro population sizes. Double-observer sightability (MDS) models perform well for estimating feral horse abundances, yet the effectiveness of these models for use in burro populations is less understood and may be different due to the smaller size, stoic behavior, and cryptic pelage of burros. These models help minimize detection bias, yet bias can be further reduced with models that account for unmodeled [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

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burro_aerial_survey_detections.csv 37.08 KB text/csv
burro_aerial_survey_detections.xml
Original FGDC Metadata

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28.46 KB application/fgdc+xml
hennig et al_burro dos models_R code.R 9.33 KB text/x-rsrc

Purpose

These data were collected to build a generalizable model of burro detection probabilities and to estimate the population size of burros within 3 different management areas.

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9OAEATC

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