Ensemble de données

Relevé de la sauvagine de l’Est

À propos

Résumé de l’ensemble de données

Composite estimates of waterfowl breeding populations using hierarchical modelling approach to combine fixed-wing and helicopter aerial counts.

Saison(s) et fréquence

annually during the breeding season

Région géographique couverte

Ontario, Quebec, Labrador, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick

Principales espèces couvertes

Ducks and geese but originally designed to cover the core breeding range of the American Black duck.

Objectifs

Estimate the size of the breeding populations of waterfowl species

Méthodologie

Plan d’échantillonnage

Helicopter plots were selected according to a systematic design using the UTM (Mercator) grid system in Ontario and Québec, and to a stratified random method in the Atlantic Provinces. Plot are surveyed on a rotating panel design whereby all plots are surveyed at least once over a 3-year period and all plots are surveyed twice over a 4-year period (see Bordage et al. 2017). The airplane survey use a stratified sampling approach were the area is divided into strata and the number of transects is greater and the transects are more closely spaced in areas with greater average duck densities (see Smith 1995).

Méthodes de terrain

Helicopter plot surveys and fixed-wing aerial transects For helicopter surveys, survey altitude vary between 15 and 50 m above ground level based on safety considerations. The helicopter speed ranged between 100 km h-1 and 30 km h-1 depending on the type of habitat being surveyed. The survey crew consisted of the pilot and three observers, one sitting in the front with the pilot and the other two sitting in the rear. For all waterfowl flocks observed by the crew, the count, species, sex composition for dimorphic species and location of the observations are recorded on a portable computer via a GPS-voice recording software For airplane survey, an aerial crew consists of the pilot and an observer; both crew members are biologists trained to count birds. Waterfowl on the transects are surveyed from the airplane. Traveling about 193 km/hr at a height of 30-50 m above the ground. All identified waterfowl within 200 m of each side of the aircraft are counted. The pilot is responsible for the left side and the observer for the right side of the transect. All waterfowl that are observed and identified within the transect boundaries are recorde

Partenaires

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Comment citer

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Service canadien de la Faune. 2025. "Relevé de la sauvagine de l’Est". Données obtenues de NatureCounts, Oiseaux Canada.