An Evaluation of Ad Hoc Presence-Only Data in Explaining Patterns of Distribution: Cetacean Sightings from Whale-Watching Vessels

The analysis of presence-only data is a problem in determining species distributions and accurately determining population sizes. The collection of such data is common from unequal or nonrandomised effort surveys, such as those surveys conducted by citizen scientists. However, causative regression-b...

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Published in:International Journal of Zoology
Main Authors: Louisa K. Higby, Richard Stafford, Chiara G. Bertulli
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: International Journal of Zoology 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/428752
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spelling fthindawi:oai:hindawi.com:10.1155/2012/428752 2023-05-15T16:50:34+02:00 An Evaluation of Ad Hoc Presence-Only Data in Explaining Patterns of Distribution: Cetacean Sightings from Whale-Watching Vessels Louisa K. Higby Richard Stafford Chiara G. Bertulli 2012 https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/428752 en eng International Journal of Zoology https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/428752 Copyright © 2012 Louisa K. Higby et al. Research Article 2012 fthindawi https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/428752 2019-05-25T21:31:38Z The analysis of presence-only data is a problem in determining species distributions and accurately determining population sizes. The collection of such data is common from unequal or nonrandomised effort surveys, such as those surveys conducted by citizen scientists. However, causative regression-based methods have been less well examined using presence-only data. In this study, we examine a range of predictive factors which might influence Cetacean sightings (specifically minke whale sightings) from whale-watching vessels in Faxaflói Bay in Iceland. In this case, environmental variables were collected regularly regardless of whether sightings were recorded. Including absences as well as presence in the analysis resulted in a multiple-generalised linear regression model with significantly more explanatory power than when data were presence only. However, by including extra information on the sightings of the whales, in this case, their observed behaviour when the sighting occurred resulted in a significantly improved model over the presence-only data model. While there are limitations of conducting nonrandomised surveys for the use of predictive models such as regression, presence-only data should not be considered as worthless, and the scope of collection of these data by citizen scientists using modern technology should not be underestimated. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland minke whale Hindawi Publishing Corporation Faxaflói ENVELOPE(-22.451,-22.451,64.322,64.322) International Journal of Zoology 2012 1 5
institution Open Polar
collection Hindawi Publishing Corporation
op_collection_id fthindawi
language English
description The analysis of presence-only data is a problem in determining species distributions and accurately determining population sizes. The collection of such data is common from unequal or nonrandomised effort surveys, such as those surveys conducted by citizen scientists. However, causative regression-based methods have been less well examined using presence-only data. In this study, we examine a range of predictive factors which might influence Cetacean sightings (specifically minke whale sightings) from whale-watching vessels in Faxaflói Bay in Iceland. In this case, environmental variables were collected regularly regardless of whether sightings were recorded. Including absences as well as presence in the analysis resulted in a multiple-generalised linear regression model with significantly more explanatory power than when data were presence only. However, by including extra information on the sightings of the whales, in this case, their observed behaviour when the sighting occurred resulted in a significantly improved model over the presence-only data model. While there are limitations of conducting nonrandomised surveys for the use of predictive models such as regression, presence-only data should not be considered as worthless, and the scope of collection of these data by citizen scientists using modern technology should not be underestimated.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Louisa K. Higby
Richard Stafford
Chiara G. Bertulli
spellingShingle Louisa K. Higby
Richard Stafford
Chiara G. Bertulli
An Evaluation of Ad Hoc Presence-Only Data in Explaining Patterns of Distribution: Cetacean Sightings from Whale-Watching Vessels
author_facet Louisa K. Higby
Richard Stafford
Chiara G. Bertulli
author_sort Louisa K. Higby
title An Evaluation of Ad Hoc Presence-Only Data in Explaining Patterns of Distribution: Cetacean Sightings from Whale-Watching Vessels
title_short An Evaluation of Ad Hoc Presence-Only Data in Explaining Patterns of Distribution: Cetacean Sightings from Whale-Watching Vessels
title_full An Evaluation of Ad Hoc Presence-Only Data in Explaining Patterns of Distribution: Cetacean Sightings from Whale-Watching Vessels
title_fullStr An Evaluation of Ad Hoc Presence-Only Data in Explaining Patterns of Distribution: Cetacean Sightings from Whale-Watching Vessels
title_full_unstemmed An Evaluation of Ad Hoc Presence-Only Data in Explaining Patterns of Distribution: Cetacean Sightings from Whale-Watching Vessels
title_sort evaluation of ad hoc presence-only data in explaining patterns of distribution: cetacean sightings from whale-watching vessels
publisher International Journal of Zoology
publishDate 2012
url https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/428752
long_lat ENVELOPE(-22.451,-22.451,64.322,64.322)
geographic Faxaflói
geographic_facet Faxaflói
genre Iceland
minke whale
genre_facet Iceland
minke whale
op_relation https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/428752
op_rights Copyright © 2012 Louisa K. Higby et al.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/428752
container_title International Journal of Zoology
container_volume 2012
container_start_page 1
op_container_end_page 5
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