1. Landbird trends in protected areas using time‐to‐event occupancy models
- Author
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Jesse Whittington, Brenda Shepherd, Anne Forshner, Julien St‐Amand, Jennifer L. Greenwood, Cameron S. Gillies, Barb Johnston, Rhonda Owchar, Derek Petersen, and James Kimo Rogala
- Subjects
climate change ,detection ,hierarchical model ,occupancy ,protected areas ,songbird ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Global populations of wildlife are affected by human activity, land cover change, and climate change. Long‐term monitoring programs across large spatial scales are required to understand how these and other factors affect wildlife populations. Occupancy models are frequently used to monitor changes in species distribution while accounting for imperfect detection. Occupancy surveys can be expensive because they typically require multiple surveys to estimate the probability of detection. Time‐to‐detection models provide a promising approach for estimating occupancy because they require just one visit; however, few studies have tested or applied these models to wildlife data. We ran a simulation study to assess biases of time‐to‐event occupancy models for standardized avian point‐count surveys and then applied the models to 10 yr of data. Time to first detection occupancy models had minimal bias and almost nominal coverage for species with a mean time to first detection
- Published
- 2019
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