Journal
BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 181, Issue -, Pages 44-53Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2014.10.030
Keywords
Accident; Animal-vehicle collision; AVC; Carcass data; Moose; Reporting bias; Road; Road-kill; Survey error; White-tailed deer; WVC
Funding
- Boone and Crockett Club
- Michigan Department of Natural Resources
- Alces Journal
- Michigan Involvement Committee of Safari Club International
- Michigan State University, Department of Fisheries and Wildlife
- Boone and Crockett Quantitative Wildlife Laboratory
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Conflicts from wildlife-vehicle collisions (WVCs) pose serious challenges for managing and conserving large ungulates throughout the world. However, underreporting of large proportions of WVCs (i.e., two-thirds of WVCs in some cases) creates concern for relying on governmental databases to inform management strategies of WVCs. Our objective was to test the sensitivity of WVC studies to underreporting using 2 species of large ungulates that experience substantial incidences of collisions but exist in different environmental settings: white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in agricultural-dominated central Illinois and moose (Mos alces) in forest-dominated western Maine, USA. We estimated baseline relationships between the landscape, traffic, and abundance of wildlife on the probabilities of WVCs using the total number of reported WVCs. Then, we simulated underreporting by randomly excluding reports of WVCs and evaluated for relative changes in precision, parameter estimates, and prediction. Point estimates of the relationships between environmental influences and WVCs for both species were reliable until high rates of underreporting occurred (>= 70%). When underreporting occurred with spatial bias, shifts in point estimates were detected only for variables that spatially-corresponded with the rate of reporting. Prediction estimates for both species were also reliable until high rates of underreporting occurred (>= 75%). These findings suggest that predictive models generate reliable estimates about WVCs with large ungulates unless underreporting is severe; possibly because they occur in non-random patterns (i.e., hotspots) and variability in their environment influences is low. We recommend that concern about underreporting not impede research with existing databases, such as those in this study, for analyzing predictive models and developing management strategies for reducing WVCs. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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