Estimating recruitment from capture-recapture data by modelling spatio-temporal variation in birth and age-specific survival rates
Authored by Richard B Chandler, Kristin Engebretsen, Michael J Cherry, Elina P Garrison, Karl V Miller
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210x.13068
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/rbchan/mee-fawn-data
Abstract
1. Understanding the factors influencing recruitment in animal
populations is an important objective of many research and conservation
programmes. However, evaluating hypotheses is challenging because
recruitment is the outcome of birth and survival processes that are
difficult to directly observe. Capture-recapture is the most general
framework for estimating recruitment in the presence of observation
error, but existing methods ignore the underlying birth and survival
processes, as well as age effects and spatial variation in vital rates.
2. We present an individual-based, spatio-temporal model that can be fit
to capture-recapture data to draw inferences on the birth and survival
processes governing recruitment dynamics. The number, dates, and spatial
distribution of births are modelled as outcomes of a point process, and
survival is modelled using a failure time approach. Survival parameters
can be modelled as functions of individuals traits and time-varying,
spatial covariates. Continuous-and discrete-time formulations are
possible. We demonstrate the model using 7 months of camera data
collected on white-tailed deer Odocoileus virginianus fawns in Big
Cypress National Preserve. Spot patterns were used to individually
identify 28 fawns, detected 1,454 times between December 1, 2015 and
July 1, 2016.
3. A total of 37 (95\% CI: 30-49) fawns were born, of which 16 (95\% CI:
10-23) survived 180 days to the recruitment age. Mean parturition date
was February 14 (95\% CI: February 6-February 22), much earlier than in
more temperate parts of the species' range, but coinciding with the dry
season in southern Florida. We found little evidence that mortality
rates decreased with age, but the estimate of the age effect was
imprecise. In contrast, we found strong evidence that encounter rates
were age-specific and increased rapidly over the first month of life as
fawns became more mobile.
4. Our case study demonstrates the potential of this new model for
advancing knowledge of spatial population dynamics by providing insights
into the birth and juvenile survival processes that influence
recruitment. Because the model can be applied to data from noninvasive
survey methods such as camera trapping, it is possible to apply it at
broad spatial scales to understand how environmental variables and
predator communities influence recruitment.
Tags
individual-based models
Demography
Population-dynamics
Inference
White-tailed deer
Integral projection models
Point process
Mark-recapture
Data augmentation
Birth-death process
Camera trapping
Spatial
capture-recapture
Spatial demography
Spatio-temporal point process
Predator hunting mode
Camera-trap