R. W. Brook, Joshua L. Dooley, Glen S. Brown, K. Abraham, R. Rockwell
{"title":"Missing release data in capture-mark-recovery analyses: consequences for inference","authors":"R. W. Brook, Joshua L. Dooley, Glen S. Brown, K. Abraham, R. Rockwell","doi":"10.3996/jfwm-21-017","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Demographic probabilities such as annual survival and harvest probability are key metrics used in research and for monitoring the health of wildlife populations and sustainability of harvest. For waterfowl populations, mark-recovery analysis is used to derive annual estimates of these probabilities using data from coordinated banding operations. The most commonly used parameterization for analyzing mark-recovery data from harvested species is the Brownie model. However, if banded waterfowl are not released during a year of a multi-year banding operation, then estimating annual survival and recovery probabilities from a dead recovery model is a challenge. Due to COVID-19, many wildlife monitoring efforts, including annual waterfowl banding programs, were canceled or reduced during 2020 and 2021, highlighting the need for managers to better understand the consequences of missing data on analyses and regulatory decisions. We summarized methods of model parameterization and use of alternative methods to explore the behavior of demographic parameter estimates when a year of release data was missing. Comparing constrained fixed-effect models (parameters during the missing year of data were set equal to parameters for years with release data) with random-effect models, we found that 1) bias of estimates during a year of missing release data were smaller when using a random-effect model, 2) the direction of the bias was unpredictable but the expected range in bias could be generally known, commensurate to the underlying variability in survival and recovery probabilities, and 3) potential bias was greatest if the missing year of releases occurred during the final year of a time series. We conclude that in some circumstances, various modeling approaches can provide reasonable estimates during a year of missing release data, particularly when underlying demographic parameters, or the parameter constrained in a model, vary little over time (e.g., adult survival in long-lived species), which would result in relatively little bias in the other estimated parameter (e.g., annual recovery probability). We also suggest that using alternative analytical techniques, such as random-effect models, may improve estimates for the demographic parameters of interest when release data are missing. Random-effect models also allowed for estimation of parameters, such as juvenile recovery probabilities during the year of missing release data, which are not identifiable using standard modeling techniques. Where accurate and precise parameter estimation is important for making harvest management decisions and regardless of the model type or the data used, there is no analytical replacement for missing release data. We suggest that practitioners determine the potential consequences for missing data through simulation by using empirical data and simulated data with known demographic probabilities to determine the best actions to take for analyzing their capture-recovery data when release data are missing.","PeriodicalId":49036,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2022-01-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management","FirstCategoryId":"93","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3996/jfwm-21-017","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"环境科学与生态学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Demographic probabilities such as annual survival and harvest probability are key metrics used in research and for monitoring the health of wildlife populations and sustainability of harvest. For waterfowl populations, mark-recovery analysis is used to derive annual estimates of these probabilities using data from coordinated banding operations. The most commonly used parameterization for analyzing mark-recovery data from harvested species is the Brownie model. However, if banded waterfowl are not released during a year of a multi-year banding operation, then estimating annual survival and recovery probabilities from a dead recovery model is a challenge. Due to COVID-19, many wildlife monitoring efforts, including annual waterfowl banding programs, were canceled or reduced during 2020 and 2021, highlighting the need for managers to better understand the consequences of missing data on analyses and regulatory decisions. We summarized methods of model parameterization and use of alternative methods to explore the behavior of demographic parameter estimates when a year of release data was missing. Comparing constrained fixed-effect models (parameters during the missing year of data were set equal to parameters for years with release data) with random-effect models, we found that 1) bias of estimates during a year of missing release data were smaller when using a random-effect model, 2) the direction of the bias was unpredictable but the expected range in bias could be generally known, commensurate to the underlying variability in survival and recovery probabilities, and 3) potential bias was greatest if the missing year of releases occurred during the final year of a time series. We conclude that in some circumstances, various modeling approaches can provide reasonable estimates during a year of missing release data, particularly when underlying demographic parameters, or the parameter constrained in a model, vary little over time (e.g., adult survival in long-lived species), which would result in relatively little bias in the other estimated parameter (e.g., annual recovery probability). We also suggest that using alternative analytical techniques, such as random-effect models, may improve estimates for the demographic parameters of interest when release data are missing. Random-effect models also allowed for estimation of parameters, such as juvenile recovery probabilities during the year of missing release data, which are not identifiable using standard modeling techniques. Where accurate and precise parameter estimation is important for making harvest management decisions and regardless of the model type or the data used, there is no analytical replacement for missing release data. We suggest that practitioners determine the potential consequences for missing data through simulation by using empirical data and simulated data with known demographic probabilities to determine the best actions to take for analyzing their capture-recovery data when release data are missing.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management encourages submission of original, high quality, English-language scientific papers on the practical application and integration of science to conservation and management of native North American fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats in the following categories: Articles, Notes, Surveys and Issues and Perspectives. Papers that do not relate directly to native North American fish, wildlife plants or their habitats may be considered if they highlight species that are closely related to, or conservation issues that are germane to, those in North America.