Authors
Brendan C Ebner, Christopher J Fulton, Stephen Cousins, James A Donaldson, Mark J Kennard, Jan-Olaf Meynecke, Jason Schaffer
Publication date
2014/10/16
Journal
Marine and Freshwater Research
Volume
66
Issue
2
Pages
120-126
Publisher
CSIRO PUBLISHING
Description
Dense tropical rainforest, waterfalls and shallow riffle-run-pool sequences pose challenges for researcher access to remote reaches of streams for surveying aquatic fauna, particularly when using capture-based collecting techniques (e.g. trapping, backpack and boat electrofishing). We compared the detection of aquatic species (vertebrates and invertebrates >1cm in body length) within pool habitats of a rainforest stream obtained by two visual techniques during both the wet and dry season: active visual survey by snorkelling and baited remote underwater video stations (BRUVSs). Snorkelling detected more species than a single BRUVS at each site, both within and among seasons. Snorkelling was most effective for recording the presence and abundance of diurnally active small-bodied species (adult size <150mm total length), although both techniques were comparable in detecting large-bodied taxa (turtles, fish …
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