Banded Brown Pelican legs
Detailed Description
Aluminum band and one plastic colored leg bands in a Brown Pelican
Sources/Usage
Courtesy: Holly E. Cox
Related
À propos des marqueurs auxiliaires
Beaucoup de chercheurs utilisent d’autres marqueurs auxiliaires (bagues de couleur, colliers, émetteurs radio, banderoles et autres marqueurs) avec les bagues fédérales afin de leur permettre d’identifier un individu à distance. Pour utiliser ces marqueurs, les chercheurs doivent avoir les permis fédéraux nécessaires et les autorisations additionnelles de marqueurs auxiliaires. Voir les exemples...
Capture-Mark-Recapture Science
Capture-Mark-Recapture (CMR) can be viewed as an animal survey method in which the count statistic is the total number of animals caught, and the associated detection probability is the probability of capture. The method involves capturing a number of animals, marking them, releasing them back into the population, and then determining the ratio of marked to unmarked animals in the population.
About Auxiliary Markers
Many researchers use other auxiliary (color leg bands, neck collars, radio transmitters, flags and tags) markers along with federal bands to allow them to identify an individual bird at a distance. To use any of these auxiliary markers researchers need to have federal banding permits and additional marking authorization. See examples of common auxiliary markers below.
Related
À propos des marqueurs auxiliaires
Beaucoup de chercheurs utilisent d’autres marqueurs auxiliaires (bagues de couleur, colliers, émetteurs radio, banderoles et autres marqueurs) avec les bagues fédérales afin de leur permettre d’identifier un individu à distance. Pour utiliser ces marqueurs, les chercheurs doivent avoir les permis fédéraux nécessaires et les autorisations additionnelles de marqueurs auxiliaires. Voir les exemples...
Capture-Mark-Recapture Science
Capture-Mark-Recapture (CMR) can be viewed as an animal survey method in which the count statistic is the total number of animals caught, and the associated detection probability is the probability of capture. The method involves capturing a number of animals, marking them, releasing them back into the population, and then determining the ratio of marked to unmarked animals in the population.
About Auxiliary Markers
Many researchers use other auxiliary (color leg bands, neck collars, radio transmitters, flags and tags) markers along with federal bands to allow them to identify an individual bird at a distance. To use any of these auxiliary markers researchers need to have federal banding permits and additional marking authorization. See examples of common auxiliary markers below.