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      The interpretation of habitat preference metrics under use-availability designs.

      Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
      Animals, Animals, Wild, Behavior, Animal, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Ecosystem, Geographic Information Systems, Telemetry

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          Abstract

          Models of habitat preference are widely used to quantify animal-habitat relationships, to describe and predict differential space use by animals, and to identify habitat that is important to an animal (i.e. that is assumed to influence fitness). Quantifying habitat preference involves the statistical comparison of samples of habitat use and availability. Preference is therefore contingent upon both of these samples. The inferences that can be made from use versus availability designs are influenced by subjectivity in defining what is available to the animal, the problem of quantifying the accessibility of available resources and the framework in which preference is modelled. Here, we describe these issues, document the conditional nature of preference and establish the limits of inferences that can be drawn from these analyses. We argue that preference is not interpretable as reflecting the intrinsic behavioural motivations of the animal, that estimates of preference are not directly comparable among different samples of availability and that preference is not necessarily correlated with the value of habitat to the animal. We also suggest that preference is context-dependent and that functional responses in preference resulting from changing availability are expected. We conclude by describing advances in analytical methods that begin to resolve these issues.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          20566501
          2894962
          10.1098/rstb.2010.0083

          Chemistry
          Animals,Animals, Wild,Behavior, Animal,Data Interpretation, Statistical,Ecosystem,Geographic Information Systems,Telemetry

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