posted on 2020-09-28, 12:13authored bySergio A. Balaguera-Reina, Catalina Pinzón-Barrera, Nidia Farfán-Ardila, David Vargas-Ortega, Llewellyn D. Densmore III
<p>Population
numbers of the American crocodile in Colombia have shown an increasing trend
during the last decades. However, the lack of monitoring programs has
restricted our understanding about this species’ ecology, limiting the ability
to develop sound conservation plans. We assessed the effectiveness and
robustness of the Individual Identification Pattern Recognition (IIPR) method
for remotely monitoring American crocodile populations based on photographs
taken by researchers, tourists, locals, and employees at the Tayrona National
Natural Park (TNNP). We catalogued a total of 97 events
from 2008 to 2020; 34.02% of which were suitable to analyze using IIPR. We
identified eight individuals across 33 events that required only 4.71 ± 1.70
transverse scute lines to obtain complete identification, with the lowest
levels of variation in the post occipital and nuchal regions compared with the
dorsal area. The probabilities of repeating both the most and least common
patterns found in the TNNP were 1.88 × 10<sup>-6</sup> and 1.81 × 10<sup>-12</sup>,
respectively, and the probabilities of repeating the same pattern of each
individual identified ranged between 48.73 × 10<sup>-11</sup> and 15.24 × 10<sup>-8</sup>.
Animals B and C were continuously identified between 2012 and 2020 along the
Arrecife beach coastline, whereas animals A, H, E, and F were occasionally
registered between 2008 and 2019 at the Cañaveral beach. Overall, the IIPR
method looks as a promising tool for monitoring American crocodile populations
in the TNNP albeit some improvements in data collection that must be done to
increase the number of useful events and analysis quality. </p>