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      Separating mortality and emigration: modelling space use, dispersal and survival with robust-design spatial capture-recapture data

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      Methods in Ecology and Evolution
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Modeling Survival and Testing Biological Hypotheses Using Marked Animals: A Unified Approach with Case Studies

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            Spatially explicit maximum likelihood methods for capture-recapture studies.

            Live-trapping capture-recapture studies of animal populations with fixed trap locations inevitably have a spatial component: animals close to traps are more likely to be caught than those far away. This is not addressed in conventional closed-population estimates of abundance and without the spatial component, rigorous estimates of density cannot be obtained. We propose new, flexible capture-recapture models that use the capture locations to estimate animal locations and spatially referenced capture probability. The models are likelihood-based and hence allow use of Akaike's information criterion or other likelihood-based methods of model selection. Density is an explicit parameter, and the evaluation of its dependence on spatial or temporal covariates is therefore straightforward. Additional (nonspatial) variation in capture probability may be modeled as in conventional capture-recapture. The method is tested by simulation, using a model in which capture probability depends only on location relative to traps. Point estimators are found to be unbiased and standard error estimators almost unbiased. The method is used to estimate the density of Red-eyed Vireos (Vireo olivaceus) from mist-netting data from the Patuxent Research Refuge, Maryland, U.S.A. Estimates agree well with those from an existing spatially explicit method based on inverse prediction. A variety of additional spatially explicit models are fitted; these include models with temporal stratification, behavioral response, and heterogeneous animal home ranges.
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              A Capture-Recapture Design Robust to Unequal Probability of Capture

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Methods in Ecology and Evolution
                Methods Ecol Evol
                Wiley-Blackwell
                2041210X
                December 2014
                December 2014
                : 5
                : 12
                : 1327-1336
                Article
                10.1111/2041-210X.12133
                625a8e5d-a04f-4567-8e59-39c458166919
                © 2014

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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