Credit
We at TERN acknowledge the Traditional Owners and Custodians throughout Australia, New Zealand and all nations. We honour their profound connections to land, water, biodiversity and culture and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and emerging.
This work was funded by the Australian Research Council and the Australian Government’s Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (www.tern.gov.au), an Australian research infrastructure facility established under the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy and Education Infrastructure Fund—Super Science Initiative through the Department of Industry, Innovation, Science, Research and Tertiary Education. This research also received support from the Australian Government’s National Environmental Science Program through the Threatened Species Recovery Hub. C.R.D. was also supported by an Australian Research Council Fellowship.
Purpose
This data set was used to determine whether: 1) camera traps provide a viable method for detecting wolf spiders (Family Lycosidae), 2) diel activity patterns of the spiders can be ascertained, and 3) patterns in spider activity vary with environmental conditions, specifically between burned and unburned habitats and the crests and bases of sand dunes.
Lineage
Data Creation
Camera traps:
Twenty-four Reconyx PC800 HyperfireTM cameras were deployed in burned and unburned areas, as well as on dune crests and dune bases. Cameras were attached to metal posts ~50 cm above the ground along four north-south facing 100 m transects, with six cameras per transect each spaced 20 m apart. Additionally, based on results from pilot trials, half the cameras were positioned vertically (facing down) and half angled at ~45° to the ground. Cameras angled at 45° had a greater field of view while those facing down were believed to have a better chance at capturing and allowing identification of lycosids. Settings were as follows: time-lapse – single image every 5 minutes between 19:00 h and 07:00 h (i.e., from just before dusk to just after dawn), and motion-trigger – single image with no delay between triggers (i.e., rapid-fire) and sensitivity set to high. Photos were tagged with location, position, angle, camera ID and species present.
Spotlighting:
Spotlight surveys were conducted in October 2016 and consisted of walking a 100 m transect for 10 minutes every hour between dusk (19:30 h) and dawn (05:30 h), using a hand-held spotlight (Fenix TK35, 960 lumens) to detect lycosid eye shine. The numbers of spiders observed in each 10-minute survey were tallied. Spotlight surveys were repeated over three nights, yielding a total of 33 transect surveys. For consistency, each survey was conducted along the same 100 m transect, which was marked by a row of six remote cameras.