Where to release birds seized from illegal traffic? The value of vocal analyses and ecological niche modeling
The principal strategy used to deal with animals recovered from trafficking operations is to release them back into nature. Our goal was to test the feasibility of using vocalizations to determine the origins of the recovered birds. We used ecological niche modeling to predict the potential distribu...
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doaj-3a266ad4c76a420fbfe1f726e9e6a0722020-12-31T04:41:28ZengElsevierPerspectives in Ecology and Conservation2530-06442017-04-0115291101Where to release birds seized from illegal traffic? The value of vocal analyses and ecological niche modelingLudmila Macedo Magroski0Andressa do Nascimento Pessoa1Wilmara Guedes de Lucena2Alan Loures-Ribeiro3Carlos Barros de Araújo4Universidade Federal da Paraíba, Centro de Ciências Exatas e da Natureza, Departamento de Sistemática e Ecologia, João Pessoa, PB, BrazilUniversidade Federal da Paraíba, Centro de Ciências Exatas e da Natureza, Departamento de Sistemática e Ecologia, João Pessoa, PB, BrazilEcology and Environmental Monitoring Graduate Program (PPGEMA), Universidade Federal da Paraíba (UFPB), João Pessoa, PB, BrazilUniversidade Federal da Paraíba, Centro de Ciências Exatas e da Natureza, Departamento de Sistemática e Ecologia, João Pessoa, PB, BrazilUniversidade Federal da Paraíba, Centro de Ciências Exatas e da Natureza, Departamento de Sistemática e Ecologia, João Pessoa, PB, Brazil; Ecology and Environmental Monitoring Graduate Program (PPGEMA), Universidade Federal da Paraíba (UFPB), João Pessoa, PB, Brazil; Corresponding author.The principal strategy used to deal with animals recovered from trafficking operations is to release them back into nature. Our goal was to test the feasibility of using vocalizations to determine the origins of the recovered birds. We used ecological niche modeling to predict the potential distributions of four species: Crypturellus soui, Diopsittaca nobilis, Sicalis flaveola, and Thamnophilus doliatus. Modeling was performed with MaxEnt, which uses geographic coordinates from known specimens and local abiotic variables. To test the resulting model, we examined whether the vocalizations could be correctly classified into generated patches using a multinomial regression. An efficient call classification would support the niche models and indicate the existence of a spatial acoustic structure that could be used to determine a bird's geographic origin. The models adjusted well to our data, giving AUC values between 0.88 and 0.94. While T. doliatus calls showed a clear acoustical structure in which the majority of their calls were correctly classified among the model patches, the three remaining test species presented intermediate patterns in which only calls from a single patch were correctly classified. The method appears to be best applied to species not demonstrating vocal learning, despite the fact that the calls of C. soui showed intermediate effectiveness in classifying their origins. While vocal plasticity could lead to low classification efficiency, it also may aid the re-adaptation of reintroduced birds, making our methodology efficient when it matters the most, or when the cost of releasing individual birds outside of their original ranges would be high.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1679007316300706ReintroductionGeographical distributionEcological Niche ModelsIllegal trade in wildlifeBioacoustics |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ludmila Macedo Magroski Andressa do Nascimento Pessoa Wilmara Guedes de Lucena Alan Loures-Ribeiro Carlos Barros de Araújo |
spellingShingle |
Ludmila Macedo Magroski Andressa do Nascimento Pessoa Wilmara Guedes de Lucena Alan Loures-Ribeiro Carlos Barros de Araújo Where to release birds seized from illegal traffic? The value of vocal analyses and ecological niche modeling Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation Reintroduction Geographical distribution Ecological Niche Models Illegal trade in wildlife Bioacoustics |
author_facet |
Ludmila Macedo Magroski Andressa do Nascimento Pessoa Wilmara Guedes de Lucena Alan Loures-Ribeiro Carlos Barros de Araújo |
author_sort |
Ludmila Macedo Magroski |
title |
Where to release birds seized from illegal traffic? The value of vocal analyses and ecological niche modeling |
title_short |
Where to release birds seized from illegal traffic? The value of vocal analyses and ecological niche modeling |
title_full |
Where to release birds seized from illegal traffic? The value of vocal analyses and ecological niche modeling |
title_fullStr |
Where to release birds seized from illegal traffic? The value of vocal analyses and ecological niche modeling |
title_full_unstemmed |
Where to release birds seized from illegal traffic? The value of vocal analyses and ecological niche modeling |
title_sort |
where to release birds seized from illegal traffic? the value of vocal analyses and ecological niche modeling |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation |
issn |
2530-0644 |
publishDate |
2017-04-01 |
description |
The principal strategy used to deal with animals recovered from trafficking operations is to release them back into nature. Our goal was to test the feasibility of using vocalizations to determine the origins of the recovered birds. We used ecological niche modeling to predict the potential distributions of four species: Crypturellus soui, Diopsittaca nobilis, Sicalis flaveola, and Thamnophilus doliatus. Modeling was performed with MaxEnt, which uses geographic coordinates from known specimens and local abiotic variables. To test the resulting model, we examined whether the vocalizations could be correctly classified into generated patches using a multinomial regression. An efficient call classification would support the niche models and indicate the existence of a spatial acoustic structure that could be used to determine a bird's geographic origin. The models adjusted well to our data, giving AUC values between 0.88 and 0.94. While T. doliatus calls showed a clear acoustical structure in which the majority of their calls were correctly classified among the model patches, the three remaining test species presented intermediate patterns in which only calls from a single patch were correctly classified. The method appears to be best applied to species not demonstrating vocal learning, despite the fact that the calls of C. soui showed intermediate effectiveness in classifying their origins. While vocal plasticity could lead to low classification efficiency, it also may aid the re-adaptation of reintroduced birds, making our methodology efficient when it matters the most, or when the cost of releasing individual birds outside of their original ranges would be high. |
topic |
Reintroduction Geographical distribution Ecological Niche Models Illegal trade in wildlife Bioacoustics |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1679007316300706 |
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