Methods, Balkema Eds, Rotterdam of Marine Mammal Populations Seattle, Washington, USA, 25-27 February 1998

: By combining double-count and line-transect sampling data we obtained estimates of animal and group densities. The sample design consists of flying aerial surveys along elevational contours with two observers in the same platform searching the same region on one side of the airplane. Detected dist...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aerial Survey Sampling, P. X. Quang, E. F. Becker
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.41.8873
http://www.math.uaf.edu/~quang/co4.pdf
Description
Summary:: By combining double-count and line-transect sampling data we obtained estimates of animal and group densities. The sample design consists of flying aerial surveys along elevational contours with two observers in the same platform searching the same region on one side of the airplane. Detected distances are not grouped, and factors such as size and activity of the group, and the extent of the horizon, that may have biased the detection ability of the observers are accounted for by use of covariates. We have adapted line transect methodology to contour transects because the mountainous terrain makes it impossible to fly straight transects. Separate detection functions of each observer are modeled by logistic curves. The theory is illustrated with data from a 1996 survey of brown bears in Kodiak Island, Alaska. 1 INTRODUCTION This is a continuation of our work on line transect sampling. It combines the modeling of single-observer line transect sampling under varying conditions (Quang an.