Handbook of Capture-Recapture Analysis

Capa
Steven C. Amstrup, Trent L. McDonald, Bryan F. J. Manly
Princeton University Press, 16 de dez. de 2010 - 336 páginas

Every day, biologists in parkas, raincoats, and rubber boots go into the field to capture and mark a variety of animal species. Back in the office, statisticians create analytical models for the field biologists' data. But many times, representatives of the two professions do not fully understand one another's roles. This book bridges this gap by helping biologists understand state-of-the-art statistical methods for analyzing capture-recapture data. In so doing, statisticians will also become more familiar with the design of field studies and with the real-life issues facing biologists.


Reliable outcomes of capture-recapture studies are vital to answering key ecological questions. Is the population increasing or decreasing? Do more or fewer animals have a particular characteristic? In answering these questions, biologists cannot hope to capture and mark entire populations. And frequently, the populations change unpredictably during a study. Thus, increasingly sophisticated models have been employed to convert data into answers to ecological questions. This book, by experts in capture-recapture analysis, introduces the most up-to-date methods for data analysis while explaining the theory behind those methods. Thorough, concise, and portable, it will be immensely useful to biologists, biometricians, and statisticians, students in both fields, and anyone else engaged in the capture-recapture process.

 

Conteúdo

Introduction to the Handbook
1
Classical Closedpopulation CaptureRecapture Models
22
Classical Openpopulation CaptureRecapture Models
36
Modern Closedpopulation CaptureRecapture Models
58
Modern Openpopulation CaptureRecapture Models
88
Tagrecovery Models
124
Joint Modeling of Tagrecovery and Liveresighting Data
142
Multistate Models
165
Examples
196
CaptureRecapture Methods in Practice
266
Appendix
275
References
281
Contributors Notes
301
Index
303
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Sobre o autor (2010)

Steven C. Amstrup researches bears and their ecosystems. His interests include distribution and movement patterns as well as wildlife population dynamics. Trent L. McDonald is a statistician and project manager with Western EcoSystems Technology, Inc. and Adjunct Professor of Statistics at the University of Wyoming. Bryan F. J. Manly is the author of several books on the statistics of natural selection, multivariate analysis, resource selection by animals, research study designs, computer-intensive statistics, and environmental statistics.

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