Occupancy modeling of bird point counts: Implications of mobile animals
Authored by Daniel B Hayes, Michael J Monfils
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1002/jwmg.943
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Occupancy modeling has been applied to a wide variety of taxa and
sampling methods, including bird point counts. A critical assumption of
basic occupancy models is that sites are occupied throughout the
duration of the study, which is unlikely to be true for typical bird
point-count studies. As such, we evaluated the implications of mobile
animals on parameter estimates. We simulated the movement and detection
of individual birds using an individual-based simulation model. We fit
the basic occupancy model to data that represented a range of animal
mobility, and determined the bias relative to known parameters used in
the simulation. Occupancy depends on the size of the site selected, with
smaller sites leading to lower occupancy for a given area and number of
individuals present. At low animal density, occupancy scales
approximately linearly with the area of sites, but at very high density, occupancy asymptotes at 1.0 across all site sizes. Even small amounts of
movement lead to bias in estimates of occupancy and detectability, and
the typical size of bird home ranges can lead to highly biased
parameters. Moreover, variation in home range size over time or across
habitats can lead to varying degrees of bias. Because of the potential
for large bias in occupancy estimates, and their sensitivity to
behaviors of birds (e.g., home range size), we recommend against
applying current occupancy models to bird point-count data. (c) 2015 The
Wildlife Society.
Tags
USA
Populations
Removal
Abundance
Detection probabilities
Habitat associations
Site occupancy