Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet...

49
• Power of observation • Observational vs. experimental studies • Direct measures vs. indices • Data sheet basics • Sampling • Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and Techniques - Overview Ecological Methodology LEC-01 Althoff

Transcript of Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet...

Page 1: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

• Power of observation• Observational vs. experimental studies• Direct measures vs. indices• Data sheet basics• Sampling• Tools/Techniques--overview

Tools and Techniques - Overview

Ecological Methodology LEC-01 Althoff

Page 2: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Power of Observation

• Knowing what, when, where, and how to look for the needed information

• Requires ____________ of the species (biotic) and physical environment (abiotic)….and knowledge of the __________________ _______________ being used to make those observations

Page 3: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Power of Observation

• Requires practice: “keen eyes, ears, touch, etc.”

• Requires proper recording….including “____________” or “___________” observations. Separate “facts” from “interpretations”

• Avoid __________________ based on inadequate information

Page 4: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Power of Observation & Recording

• Key question: what to record?• Trust nothing to memory:

a) write it downb) record it on tapec) enter it into a data loggerd) capture it via picture/video

• Use standardized data sheets (for consistency…but don’t hesitate to record the trivial.

Page 5: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Observational vs. Experimental Studies

• Observational: _________ (usually), trying to determine basics, learn patterns, trends, characteristics

• Experimental: ________ (usually), have basic knowledge of subject that enables one to “separate” into treatment groups

Page 6: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Observational vs. Experimental Studies

• Observational: generally summarize data using _______________ statistics

• Experimental: determine if differences between treatments are “real” using ______________ statistics

Page 7: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Statistics • Descriptive statistics: central tendency: mean,

median, mode spread: range, variance, standard deviation, standard error

• Inferential statistics: t-test, sign test, Kruskal-Wallis test, F-test, Analysis of Variance (ANOVA), Friedman test….some are parametric, some are non-parametric

• Models: Akaikae Information Criterion (AIC),Structural Equation Modeling (SEM)

Page 8: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Direct Measure (estimates) vs. Index

• Direct measure: length of hind foot,mass (wt.), color of fur, contents of stomach, N content of feces, height of vegetation, stage of leaf-out, etc.

• Index: “some approximation” of what is exactly there. Assumes that the “index” is a true reflection of the actual measure.

Page 9: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Direct Measure TO PRODUCE AN Index• Sometimes, take a “direct” measure but use it

to produce an index:ex: measure fat around the kidney

as an indicator of overall body condition (weigh the fat, weigh thekidney): kidney fat index

ex: monitor breeding behaviors of birds to estimate proportion ofadults suspected of nesting andproducing young: reproductive success index

Page 10: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Data Sheet Basics

• Keep it simple• Date, time “slots”• Sequence on sheet for data entry should

match the “procedure” whenever possible• Use check boxes:

a) “repeated”/standard entriesb) avoiding lots of writingc) consistency

• Back-up/make copies of data !!!!!

Page 11: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Data sheet examples

Page 12: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Sampling

• Three basic types: randomsystematicstratified

Page 13: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Where are you? _____ = global positioning system

$200-600+/- 10 m accuracy $5,000 – 6,000

+/- 0.1 m accuracy

Page 14: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Locational/Directional “Tools”

• Compass• Topographic maps (“topos”)• Hand-drawn maps• Altimeter• Etc.

• GPS: position (on the face of earth, including altitude): UTM coordinates = X-Y coordinates

Page 15: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

GPS / GIS

• Need GPS data to feed into GIS • _____ = geographical information system• Produce “layers”• Produce maps• Evaluate data ____________!!!• Satellite imagery reaching finer and finer scale:

was 3 m x 3 m resolution…almost commercially available at 1m x 1m or less

• Cautions: 1) garbage in, garbage out 2) “boots” on the ground

observations still needed

Page 16: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Cover boards

woodmetal

Monitor: salamanders snakes macroinvertebrates

Page 17: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Cover boards

Page 18: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Traps “box type”

Live capture (and release)

Monitor small mammalsa) Presence/absenceb) Species richnessc) Popn estimation (i.e., mark-recapture)

Sherman live-trap (H.B. Sherman)

cage trap

Page 19: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Pitfall traps

Monitor:a) small mammalsb) amphibiansc) arthropods (ex. beetles)

Page 20: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Mist nets

Page 21: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Nest boxes

Page 23: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Trip/Trail Cameras

• _____________ method• Constant monitoring or program to sample at

certain times• “Captures” the individual(s)… ID

individuals sometimesDate and time stamps (temp, too,?)Archive data

Page 24: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Visual Obstruction “Readings” (VOR)Robel Pole: in grassland habitat, high degree of correlation between “height” and biomass (vegetative) present

Robel PoleNudds Board

Page 25: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Daubenmire Frame Estimate % cover (vegetation?)

Estimate % bare ground (abiotic)

Page 26: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Sampling “frames”

• Daubenmire frame: 10 cm x 20 cm• Meter frame: 2.0 m x 0.5 m or

1.0 m x 1.0 m= 1 m2

• Estimate coverage: 0-5, 5-10, 10-25, 25-50, >50

• Estimate species density

• Estimate species richness

Page 27: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Sampling: Lines & Points

• Line transectcount plant

species on line or plants every 10 m,

measure distance coverage, etc.

• Distance sampling• Point-centered

Page 28: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Distance Sampling

• Work off of line transect• Measure distance individual (plant, animal,

bare ground, nest, etc.) is from the line• Software program DISTANCE can help

estimate density with confidence intervals (direct measure…not an index…to population density to measure abundance)

Page 29: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Point Center Sampling

• Bird counts using this approach known as “point counts”

• Plant/tree sampling using this approach that uses points is called “point-centered quadrats”

Page 30: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Point counts

-hear or see bird

Page 31: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Canopy Cover

_____________________(index to either lightpenetration and/or overhead cover…ordirect measure if photograph & analysis)

Page 32: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Tree sizes: DBH = diameter breast height

Biltmore stick

DBH tape

Page 33: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Distance to or height of an object: range finder

+/- 1 m accuracy for this type.

GPS unit could serveSame function if take 2 points

Finer scale: Fat-max it (+/- 0.02m…1/16”)

Page 34: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Soil Probes:measuring physical environment:

bulk density (soil compaction)pHN, C, etc.

Measuring biotic environment:nematodes (roundworms)annelids (earthworms)

Page 35: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Radiotelemetry: VHF & GPS units

Page 36: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Radiotelemetry…advantages include

• “Follow” the same individual “everywhere”• “Follow” the same individual at any time• Can minimize observer bias…but limitations, for

example: collar too tight, too heavy, too easy to be “restrictive”, and issue with

‘social’ species• Can generate “lots of data”

Page 37: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Sampling Arthropods

Kill jars

Sweep nets lights & sheets

Page 38: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Secchi Diskmeasuring physical environment:

“transparency” = turbidity, usually to the nearest 1 ft or. 0.25 m

Page 39: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Bottom sampler (substrate) “___ bottom sampler”

Pokar dredgeEckman dredge

Page 40: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Kick seines

Measuring biotic environment, by capturing: macroinvertebrates fishes turtles etc.

Page 41: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Substrate plates (Hester-Dendy multi-plate samplers)

Measuring biotic environment, by capturing: “small” macroinvertebrates that will “adhere” to the plates. Usually leave in water for ____ weeks

Page 42: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Electro-shockersStuns fish, fish rise to surface, net fish and then process….

Can: ID to species remove scale (to

age) release or harvest

Page 43: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

___________ sampling(abiotic environment)

________or ________ (generally done in the field with ‘fresh’ samples)…otherwise use meter or take to lab

Page 44: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Aging and Sexing

Page 45: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Hair snares(using barbed wire or sticky substance)

•non-invasive•determine species (visual inspection or DNA)•If “really good”, individuals

Page 46: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Fecal Matter = Scats & Pellets

Page 47: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Fecal Matter = Scats & Pellets

Page 48: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Fecal & Urine Samples…

• Non-invasive sampling• Determine food habits• Determine presence/absence• Determine nutritional status (including N

content of diet)• Determine species, sometimes individuals• Determine reproductive status

Page 49: Power of observation Observational vs. experimental studies Direct measures vs. indices Data sheet basics Sampling Tools/Techniques--overview Tools and.

Lots of room for innovation…

• Sampling/observing “something” different may require different method and/or equipment

• New technologies provide now opportunities (ex. barcodes)

• But….equipment still has limitations. Good field biologist ________ forget that!