Data from: Estimating transient populations of unmarked individuals at a migratory stopover site using generalized N-mixture models ...

1. Migration counts are popular indices used to monitor population trends over time. Advanced analytical methods for estimating abundance of unmarked, open populations now incorporate population growth models and simultaneously test for covariate effects on abundance and detection probability. Howev...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kwon, Eunbi, Houghton, Lawrence M., Settlage, Robert E., Catlin, Daniel H., Karpanty, Sarah M., Fraser, James D.
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.bc1k2b3
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.bc1k2b3
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Summary:1. Migration counts are popular indices used to monitor population trends over time. Advanced analytical methods for estimating abundance of unmarked, open populations now incorporate population growth models and simultaneously test for covariate effects on abundance and detection probability. However, estimating population abundance at a staging site is complicated by daily immigration and emigration of unmarked individuals. 2. We applied a set of generalized N-mixture models to simulated count data to test their applicability for transient populations. Using simulated datasets, parameters were unbiased when the apparent survival rate varied within a season or was mis-specified in a model, but not when the immigration or detection probability was mis-specified. 3. With knowledge from the simulated data, we applied these models to daily counts of staging migratory shorebirds and estimated daily abundances accounting for variation in the detection and immigration rates. Daily counts of ruddy turnstones ... : Kwon_JAPPL_2018_00216.R3_dataRepeated counts of ruddy turnstones surveyed at Westhampton Island, New York, during the northward migration of 1997–1999, accompanied with environmental covariates. ...