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Characterizing spatio-temporal variation in survival and recruitment with integrated population models
by
Chandler, Richard B.
, Merker, Samuel
, Cooper, Robert J.
, Hepinstall-Cymerman, Jeff
, Abernathy-Conners, Heather
in
altitude
/ Animal populations
/ biocenosis
/ Birds
/ Breeding
/ Capture-recapture studies
/ Cardellina canadensis
/ climate
/ Climate change
/ Data
/ data collection
/ Demographic variables
/ Demographics
/ Demography
/ Density
/ distance sampling
/ Dynamics
/ elevation gradients
/ Frameworks
/ Growth rate
/ Habitats
/ individual-based models
/ integrated pest management
/ Interactions
/ Labour
/ Males
/ Mathematical models
/ METHODS AND STATISTICS
/ Modelling
/ North Carolina
/ Parameter estimation
/ Parameter identification
/ Parameters
/ Population decline
/ Population dynamics
/ Population growth
/ Population statistics
/ range shifts
/ Recruitment
/ Recruitment (fisheries)
/ Spatial data
/ spatial variation
/ Spatial variations
/ spatio-temporal point process
/ species distributions
/ Surveying
/ surveys
/ Survival
/ temporal variation
/ Temporal variations
2018
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Characterizing spatio-temporal variation in survival and recruitment with integrated population models
by
Chandler, Richard B.
, Merker, Samuel
, Cooper, Robert J.
, Hepinstall-Cymerman, Jeff
, Abernathy-Conners, Heather
in
altitude
/ Animal populations
/ biocenosis
/ Birds
/ Breeding
/ Capture-recapture studies
/ Cardellina canadensis
/ climate
/ Climate change
/ Data
/ data collection
/ Demographic variables
/ Demographics
/ Demography
/ Density
/ distance sampling
/ Dynamics
/ elevation gradients
/ Frameworks
/ Growth rate
/ Habitats
/ individual-based models
/ integrated pest management
/ Interactions
/ Labour
/ Males
/ Mathematical models
/ METHODS AND STATISTICS
/ Modelling
/ North Carolina
/ Parameter estimation
/ Parameter identification
/ Parameters
/ Population decline
/ Population dynamics
/ Population growth
/ Population statistics
/ range shifts
/ Recruitment
/ Recruitment (fisheries)
/ Spatial data
/ spatial variation
/ Spatial variations
/ spatio-temporal point process
/ species distributions
/ Surveying
/ surveys
/ Survival
/ temporal variation
/ Temporal variations
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
Characterizing spatio-temporal variation in survival and recruitment with integrated population models
by
Chandler, Richard B.
, Merker, Samuel
, Cooper, Robert J.
, Hepinstall-Cymerman, Jeff
, Abernathy-Conners, Heather
in
altitude
/ Animal populations
/ biocenosis
/ Birds
/ Breeding
/ Capture-recapture studies
/ Cardellina canadensis
/ climate
/ Climate change
/ Data
/ data collection
/ Demographic variables
/ Demographics
/ Demography
/ Density
/ distance sampling
/ Dynamics
/ elevation gradients
/ Frameworks
/ Growth rate
/ Habitats
/ individual-based models
/ integrated pest management
/ Interactions
/ Labour
/ Males
/ Mathematical models
/ METHODS AND STATISTICS
/ Modelling
/ North Carolina
/ Parameter estimation
/ Parameter identification
/ Parameters
/ Population decline
/ Population dynamics
/ Population growth
/ Population statistics
/ range shifts
/ Recruitment
/ Recruitment (fisheries)
/ Spatial data
/ spatial variation
/ Spatial variations
/ spatio-temporal point process
/ species distributions
/ Surveying
/ surveys
/ Survival
/ temporal variation
/ Temporal variations
2018
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Characterizing spatio-temporal variation in survival and recruitment with integrated population models
Journal Article
Characterizing spatio-temporal variation in survival and recruitment with integrated population models
2018
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Overview
Efforts to understand population dynamics and identify high-quality habitat require information about spatial variation in demographic parameters. However, estimating demographic parameters typically requires labor-intensive capture–recapture methods that are difficult to implement over large spatial extents. Spatially explicit integrated population models (IPMs) provide a solution by accommodating spatial capture–recapture (SCR) data collected at a small number of sites with survey data that may be collected over a much larger extent. We extended the spatial IPM framework to include a spatio-temporal point process model for recruitment, and we applied the model to 4 yr of SCR and distance-sampling data on Canada Warblers (Cardellina canadensis) near the southern extent of the species' breeding range in North Carolina, USA, where climate change is predicted to cause population declines and distributional shifts toward higher elevations. To characterize spatial variation in demographic parameters over the climate gradient in our study area, we modeled density, survival, and per capita recruitment as functions of elevation. We used a male-only model because males comprised >90% of our point-count detections. Apparent survival was low but increased with elevation, from 0.040 (95% credible interval [CI]: 0.0032–0.12) at 900 m to 0.29 (95% CI: 0.16–0.42) at 1,500 m. Recruitment was not strongly associated with elevation, yet density varied greatly, from <0.03 males ha–1 below 1,000 m to >0.2 males ha–1 above 1,400 m. Point estimates of population growth rate were <1 at all elevations, but 95% CIs included 1. Additional research is needed to assess the possibility of a long-term decline and to examine the effects of abiotic variables and biotic interactions on the demographic parameters influencing the species' distribution. The modeling framework developed here provides a platform for addressing these issues and advancing knowledge about spatial demography and population dynamics.
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