Data Set Citation:
When using this data, please cite the data package:
NIES Fukushima Terrestrial Ecosystem Monitoring Team, National Institute for Environmental Studies.
Mammal assemblages recorded by camera traps inside and outside the evacuation zone of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident
ERDP-2016-03.1.5 (https://db.cger.nies.go.jp/JaLTER/metacat/metacat/ERDP-2016-03.1.5/jalter-en)
General Information:
Title:Mammal assemblages recorded by camera traps inside and outside the evacuation zone of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident
Identifier:ERDP-2016-03.1.5
Abstract:
In 2011, the Fukushima Daiichi Power Plant accident resulted in the evacuation of about 81,000 people from the evacuation zone, which suffered from high levels of radioactive contamination. Large-scale and long-term land abandonment can cause changes in species assemblages. Despite the extensive global attention this incident received, open and spatially-explicit datasets of mammal fauna from Fukushima remain quite limited. We established a continuous monitoring protocol using camera traps for mammals both inside and outside the evacuation zone; this paper presents the dataset. These data represent the monitoring results from 46 camera traps from May 2014 to June 2021, including the location and actuation time of each camera, and the list of video records. After the publication of this initial data paper, we intend to continue monitoring until 2023 and the dataset will be hereafter updated with new observations.
Keywords:
  • forest
  • Satoyama
  • depopulation
  • carnivore
  • herbivore
  • Japan
Data Table, Image, and Other Data Details:
Metadata download: Ecological Metadata Language (EML) File
Data Table:NIES_FTEM_cameratrap_detection_updated_29Feb2024 ( View Metadata | Download File download)
Data Table:NIES_FTEM_cameratrap_evacuation_updated_6Mar2024 ( View Metadata | Download File download)
Data Table:NIES_FTEM_cameratrap_occasion_updated_29Feb2024 ( View Metadata | Download File download)
Other Data:Updates_March2024.docx ( View Metadata | Download File download)
Other Data:dwca-NIES_FTEM_cameratrap_updated_8Mar2024.zip ( View Metadata | Download File download)

Involved Parties

Data Set Owners:
Organization:NIES Fukushima Terrestrial Ecosystem Monitoring Team, National Institute for Environmental Studies
Address:
16-2 Onogawa,
Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8506 Japan
Email Address:
ecomoni_fukushima@nies.go.jp
Data Set Contacts:
Organization:NIES Fukushima Terrestrial Ecosystem Monitoring Team, National Institute for Environmental Studies
Address:
16-2 Onogawa,
Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8506 Japan
Email Address:
ecomoni_fukushima@nies.go.jp
Associated Parties:
Individual: Keita Fukasawa
Organization:Fukushima Project Office / Biodiversity Division, National Institute for Environmental Studies
Email Address:
k.fukasawa37@gmail.com
Individual: Yoshio Mishima
Organization:Faculty of Geo-Environmental Science, Rissho University
Individual: Akira Yoshioka
Organization:Fukushima Regional Collaborative Research Center, National Institute for Environmental Studies
Individual: Nao Kumada
Organization:Biodiversity Division, National Institute for Environmental Studies
Individual: Kumiko Totsu
Organization:Biodiversity Division, National Institute for Environmental Studies
Individual: Takeshi Osawa
Organization:Graduate School of Urban Environmental Sciences, Tokyo Metropolitan University
Individual: Noe Matsushima
Organization:Faculty of Science, Toho University
Individual: Saeko Terada
Organization:College of Arts and Sciences, Tamagawa University
Individual: Yui Ogawa
Organization:Biodiversity Division, National Institute for Environmental Studies
Individual: Hirofumi Ouchi
Organization:Fukushima Regional Collaborative Research Center, National Institute for Environmental Studies

Data Set Characteristics

Geographic Region:
Geographic Description:The eastern part of Fukushima prefecture, Japan
Bounding Coordinates:
West:  140.55635  degrees
East:  140.96821  degrees
North:  37.79275  degrees
South:  37.03656  degrees
Time Period:
Begin:
2014-05-14
End:
2021-06-08

Sampling, Processing and Quality Control Methods

Step by Step Procedures
Step 1:
Description:

Sampling method

A trail camera (Trophycam HD, and its succesor models by Bushnell Outdoor Products) is installed at each monitoring site during May 2014 to June 2021. Cameras were adjusted to video mode, and the image resolution was 1280×720 pixels (720p) and the frame rate was 30 fps in daytime mode (visible light imaging) and 18 fps in night-vision mode (infrared monochrome imaging). Although the video length was set to 30 seconds, the camera model number 119776 and the later automatically change the video length to 15 seconds in the night-vision mode due to their specifications. The trigger interval was set to 10-second, but it sometimes took more time to recover actually. Cameras were fixed to tree trunks at a height of about 1 m. Data collection and battery exchange have been conducted biannually. In 2014, the data collection and battery exchange were conducted in October and partially in July. Mammals that appeared in the videos were identified and recorded to the event list. The duration between battery exchanges was defined as the “occasion”, and the start and end times of each occasion for each camera were recorded. The occasion values provide information on the durations for which the camera traps were active, and make it possible to calculate records per unit time. An occasion end time was defined as the time when the last video file was recorded, if a camera was inactive due to battery exhaustion or mechanical failure at the visit. The sensor cameras used in this study are essentially suitable tools for monitoring medium to large sized mammals (O'Brien et al. 2011). The capture efficiency of small mammals (e.g. rodents and shrews), can be highly sensitive to small variations in the installation of cameras, and we do not recommend treating the data on small mammals belonging to the orders Rodentia, Soricomorpha and Chiroptera as correlative indices of abundance.

Step 2:
Description:

Taxonomy and systematics

All species were identified by the authors or by research collaborators who are mammal experts. If we could not obtain sufficient information for species identification from a video image, we recorded a higher taxonomic level (e.g. order and class) which could be certainly specified. Scientific names followed Ohdachi et al. (Ohdachi et al. 2009) and the Catalogue of Life (http://www.catalogueoflife.org/).

Data Set Usage Rights

Users can download the datasets via the internet under a Creative Commons attribution license CC-BY 4.0 International (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode).
Access Control:
Auth System:JaLTER
Order:allowFirst
Allow: [read] public
Metadata download: Ecological Metadata Language (EML) File