Journal article
Designing occupancy surveys and interpreting non-detection when observations are imperfect
BA Wintle, TV Walshe, KM Parris, MA Mccarthy
Diversity and Distributions | Published : 2012
Abstract
Aim: Conservation practitioners use biological surveys to ascertain whether or not a site is occupied by a particular species. Widely used statistical methods estimate the probability that a species will be detected in a survey of an occupied site. However, these estimates of detection probability are alone not sufficient to calculate the probability that a species is present given that it was not detected. The aim of this paper is to demonstrate methods for correctly calculating (1) the probability a species occupies a site given one or more non-detections, and (2) the number of sequential non-detections necessary to assert, with a pre-specified confidence, that a species is absent from a s..
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Grants
Awarded by ARC
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
BAW and MMC are supported by ARC Future Fellowships FT100100819 and FT100100923. BAW, MMC, KMP were supported by funding from the National Environment Research Program Environmental Decisions Hub and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions. TVW was supported by the Australian Centre for Excellence in Risk Analysis. Georgia Garrard, Mark Burgman and Libby Rumpff provided helpful references and comments.