An integrated state-space model to assess Italian alpine galliforms status from count and bag data

The assessment of wildlife population sizes and their trends is one of the most important research fields in conservation biology, as it is used to identify vulnerability soon enough to implement measures in threatened species, or to set up sustainable harvesting rates in exploited populations. Yet,...

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Main Authors: Coline, Canonne, Martinoli, Alessio, Martinoli, Adriano, Besnard, Aurélien
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Authorea, Inc. 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/au.162300473.35028379/v1
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spelling crwinnower:10.22541/au.162300473.35028379/v1 2024-09-15T18:32:26+00:00 An integrated state-space model to assess Italian alpine galliforms status from count and bag data Coline, Canonne Martinoli, Alessio Martinoli, Adriano Besnard, Aurélien 2021 http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/au.162300473.35028379/v1 unknown Authorea, Inc. posted-content 2021 crwinnower https://doi.org/10.22541/au.162300473.35028379/v1 2024-07-30T04:24:26Z The assessment of wildlife population sizes and their trends is one of the most important research fields in conservation biology, as it is used to identify vulnerability soon enough to implement measures in threatened species, or to set up sustainable harvesting rates in exploited populations. Yet, because field work is expensive, may be difficult in terms of logistics and because some populations of the same species may be monitored by different stakeholders, population status often rely on fragmented and heterogenous information on sub-populations collected through various monitoring programs. In this context, data integration, i.e. the simultaneous analysis of different datasets in a single modelling framework allows to get unbiased and more precise trend estimates than separated analysis that in turn may lead to more adequate management policies. In this study we developed an integrated state-space model to jointly model populations growth rates from individual counts and hunting bags data for three hunted species of mountain Galliformes in Italy. We examined population trends at various spatial scales and disentangled the potential effect of game management plans from biological factors. The integration of counts and bags succeeded in improving growth rate parameter precision and in reducing proxy-specific bias by increasing the sample size and extending data series length. On a 19-year basis, all three species exhibited negative mean growth rates. We did not find strong regional patterns for Rock ptarmigan and Rock partridge, as a likely consequence of prevailing effects of local environmental conditions on population growth rate. Black grouse eastern populations exhibited lower growth rate than western populations. Our paper demonstrates that an integrated model of different index of population size of game species can provide more accurate values than separate analysis, we advocate to consider such an approach for other wildlife monitoring cases for which data is scarce. Other/Unknown Material rock ptarmigan The Winnower
institution Open Polar
collection The Winnower
op_collection_id crwinnower
language unknown
description The assessment of wildlife population sizes and their trends is one of the most important research fields in conservation biology, as it is used to identify vulnerability soon enough to implement measures in threatened species, or to set up sustainable harvesting rates in exploited populations. Yet, because field work is expensive, may be difficult in terms of logistics and because some populations of the same species may be monitored by different stakeholders, population status often rely on fragmented and heterogenous information on sub-populations collected through various monitoring programs. In this context, data integration, i.e. the simultaneous analysis of different datasets in a single modelling framework allows to get unbiased and more precise trend estimates than separated analysis that in turn may lead to more adequate management policies. In this study we developed an integrated state-space model to jointly model populations growth rates from individual counts and hunting bags data for three hunted species of mountain Galliformes in Italy. We examined population trends at various spatial scales and disentangled the potential effect of game management plans from biological factors. The integration of counts and bags succeeded in improving growth rate parameter precision and in reducing proxy-specific bias by increasing the sample size and extending data series length. On a 19-year basis, all three species exhibited negative mean growth rates. We did not find strong regional patterns for Rock ptarmigan and Rock partridge, as a likely consequence of prevailing effects of local environmental conditions on population growth rate. Black grouse eastern populations exhibited lower growth rate than western populations. Our paper demonstrates that an integrated model of different index of population size of game species can provide more accurate values than separate analysis, we advocate to consider such an approach for other wildlife monitoring cases for which data is scarce.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Coline, Canonne
Martinoli, Alessio
Martinoli, Adriano
Besnard, Aurélien
spellingShingle Coline, Canonne
Martinoli, Alessio
Martinoli, Adriano
Besnard, Aurélien
An integrated state-space model to assess Italian alpine galliforms status from count and bag data
author_facet Coline, Canonne
Martinoli, Alessio
Martinoli, Adriano
Besnard, Aurélien
author_sort Coline, Canonne
title An integrated state-space model to assess Italian alpine galliforms status from count and bag data
title_short An integrated state-space model to assess Italian alpine galliforms status from count and bag data
title_full An integrated state-space model to assess Italian alpine galliforms status from count and bag data
title_fullStr An integrated state-space model to assess Italian alpine galliforms status from count and bag data
title_full_unstemmed An integrated state-space model to assess Italian alpine galliforms status from count and bag data
title_sort integrated state-space model to assess italian alpine galliforms status from count and bag data
publisher Authorea, Inc.
publishDate 2021
url http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/au.162300473.35028379/v1
genre rock ptarmigan
genre_facet rock ptarmigan
op_doi https://doi.org/10.22541/au.162300473.35028379/v1
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