ANALYSIS OF ERROR FROM CEMENTUM-ANNULI AGE ESTIMATES OF KNOWN-AGE PENNSYLVANIA BLACK BEARS

Citation
Wa. Harshyne et al., ANALYSIS OF ERROR FROM CEMENTUM-ANNULI AGE ESTIMATES OF KNOWN-AGE PENNSYLVANIA BLACK BEARS, The Journal of wildlife management, 62(4), 1998, pp. 1281-1291
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology,Zoology
ISSN journal
0022541X
Volume
62
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
1281 - 1291
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-541X(1998)62:4<1281:AOEFCA>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
Cementum-annuli counts are considered the most accurate indicators of age for black bears (Ursus americanus), but tests of the technique hav e lacked large sample sizes of known-age teeth, and sources of error a re not well documented. We estimated ages from cementum-annuli counts of 671 teeth from 521 Pennsylvania black bears and compared the estima ted ages to their known age. We evaluated teeth aged during 1983-91 wi th aging criteria different from the criteria used during 1992-96, but we found no differences (M: P = 0.125; F: P = 0.748). Overall, 8.1% o f the known-age teeth were aged incorrectly, and we found no differenc es in error distributions between sexes (P = 0.126). For both sexes, p ercent error increased as age class increased (Ps less than or equal t o 0.010). The number of incorrectly aged teeth was greater than expect ed (Ps less than or equal to 0.104) in black bears captured during Sep tember-November (M = 11%, n = 198; F = 13%, n = 181) than during March -May (M = 3%, n = 76; F = 4%, n = 49) and June-August (M = 3%, n = 120 ; F = 2%, n = 45). Of 51 incorrectly aged teeth we reevaluated, 19 (37 %) were aged incorrectly because of irregular tooth characteristics to which standardized aging criteria could not be applied accurately. Th irteen (25%) probably would have been aged correctly via aging criteri a revised in 1992, 13 (25%) had no discernible reason for being incorr ectly aged and may have been mislabeled, 5 (10%) were broken during ex traction, and 1 (2%) was aged incorrectly by the tooth reader even tho ugh the annuli were normal and distinct. We concluded that counting ce mentum annuli is a valid technique for aging Pennsylvania black bears.