Journal article

Spatially explicit power analysis for detecting occupancy trends for multiple species

DM Southwell, LD Einoder, JJ Lahoz-Monfort, A Fisher, GR Gillespie, BA Wintle

Ecological Applications | WILEY | Published : 2019

Abstract

Assessing the statistical power to detect changes in wildlife populations is a crucial yet often overlooked step when designing and evaluating monitoring programs. Here, we developed a simulation framework to perform spatially explicit statistical power analysis of biological monitoring programs for detecting temporal trends in occupancy for multiple species. Using raster layers representing the spatial variation in current occupancy and species-level detectability for one or multiple observation methods, our framework simulates changes in occupancy over space and time, with the capacity to explicitly model stochastic disturbances at monitoring sites (i.e., dynamic landscapes). Once users sp..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Funding Acknowledgements

This study was supported by funding from the Australian Government's National Environmental Science Programme through the Threatened Species Recovery Hub. We thank Anja Skroblin and David Wilkinson for useful comments on the manuscript. Monitoring was assisted by financial support from LTERN. Charmaine Redmond, Terry Marney, Alys Stevens, Jenni Risler, Brydie Hill, Dani Stokeld, Tony Popic, Tim Gentles, Kathryn Buckley, Emmanuelle Corolleur, Nicholas Cuff, and Matthew Fegan all contributed to data collection and processing.