RESUMO
The following work presents the first study applying the passive acoustic monitoring of anurans at lotic environments for a long time. This study aims to test the efficiency of the passive acoustic monitoring method and active monitoring in detecting anurans in lotic environments of Itinguçu State Park. Specifically, we tested whether species richness differs when comparing active and passive monitoring surveys. Therefore, this study aims to test the efficiency of the passive acoustic monitoring method and active monitoring in detecting anurans in lotic environments of the Itinguçu State Park. The passive acoustic monitoring period was 72 uninterrupted hours at each collection point with intervals of 45 days. Finally, species richness was calculated, and the efficiency of the methods was compared in different scenarios. Our results demonstrated that the park has species that vocalize day and night, but most at night, there is overlapping acoustic niche; waterfall environments harm the quality of recordings; and in lotic environments the active monitoring method was more efficient than the passive acoustic monitoring in all sampling scales. Although the passive acoustic monitoring was not as efficient in a low temporal scale, it tends to increase in efficiency with longer sampling duration.