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Treefrog lateral line as a mean of individual identification through visual and software assisted methodologies

Title
Treefrog lateral line as a mean of individual identification through visual and software assisted methodologies
Authors
Kim M.Y.Borzée A.Kim J.Y.Jang Y.
Ewha Authors
장이권
SCOPUS Author ID
장이권scopus
Issue Date
2017
Journal Title
Journal of Ecology and Environment
ISSN
2288-1220JCR Link
Citation
Journal of Ecology and Environment vol. 41, no. 1
Keywords
Lateral linesPhotographic individual identificationSoftware assisted identificationTreefrogVisual identificationWild-ID
Publisher
BioMed Central Ltd.
Indexed
SCOPUS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Background: Ecological research often requires monitoring of a specific individual over an extended period of time. To enable non-invasive re-identification, consistent external marking is required. Treefrogs possess lateral lines for crypticity. While these patterns decrease predator detection, they also are individual specific patterns. In this study, we tested the use of lateral lines in captive and wild populations of Dryophytes japonicus as natural markers for individual identification. For the purpose of the study, the results of visual and software assisted identifications were compared. Results: In normalized laboratory conditions, a visual individual identification method resulted in a 0.00 rate of false-negative identification (RFNI) and a 0.0068 rate of false-positive identification (RFPI), whereas Wild-ID resulted in RFNI = 0.25 and RFNI = 0.00. In the wild, female and male data sets were tested. For both data sets, visual identification resulted in RFNI and RFPI of 0.00, whereas the RFNI was 1.0 and RFPI was 0.00 with Wild-ID. Wild-ID did not perform as well as visual identification methods and had low scores for matching photographs. The matching scores were significantly correlated with the continuity of the type of camera used in the field. Conclusions: We provide clear methodological guidelines for photographic identification of D. japonicus using their lateral lines. We also recommend the use of Wild-ID as a supplemental tool rather the principal identification method when analyzing large datasets. © 2017 The Author(s).
DOI
10.1186/s41610-017-0060-1
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자연과학대학 > 생명과학전공 > Journal papers
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