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Leveraging local wildlife surveys for robust occupancy trend estimation

Authors :
Jordan L. Heiman
Jody M. Tucker
Sarah N. Sells
Joshua J. Millspaugh
Michael K. Schwartz
Source :
Ecological Indicators, Vol 169, Iss , Pp 112863- (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2024.

Abstract

Natural resource agencies are frequently tasked with monitoring populations of at-risk species to ensure management activities do not negatively affect the viability of wildlife populations. Typically, these monitoring efforts evaluate trends in a population’s abundance, occupancy, or geographic distribution. Often, surveys provide local information, but results are generally not incorporated into broad-scale monitoring efforts that focus on range-wide population changes due to their variable nature in both spatial extent and effort. We investigated whether aggregating these local (hereafter “variable”) surveys can generate enough statistical power to estimate broad-scale population trends using simulations of declining populations of fishers (Pekania pennati) over a 10-year time horizon. Our simulations included three population sizes which we refer to as abundant, common, and rare (N0 = 700, 350, and 100 individuals, respectively) with each declining at a rapid and moderate pace (λ = 0.933, and 0.977, respectively). For each population, we simulated variable surveys using an occupancy framework to subsample the population with parameters that mimic combining multiple independent monitoring efforts which vary annually in location, and effort. Regardless of spatial consistency of annual sampling, there was minimal variation in statistical power under both high and low detection probability simulations. However, when sampling effort varied each year, statistical power was lower for most populations and sampling scenarios when compared to consistent sampling effort unless some baseline level of sampling effort was reliably achieved in all years. In many cases, adding low-level consistent baseline sampling to variable surveys resulted in statistical power close to that of consistent sampling efforts. Our results suggest statistical power is driven by annual consistency in the proportion of landscape sampled rather than spatial consistency in sampling locations. This result indicates that current variable surveys could be leveraged and combined to detect population declines for at-risk species at broad-scales if a baseline proportion of landscape is robustly sampled. The level of baseline sampling is highly dependent on population size and magnitudes of population change. In simulations with a common or abundant population experiencing a rapid decline, a baseline survey effort of at least 5% of the landscape in combination with variable surveys resulted in statistical power consistently above the standard threshold of 0.80 for occupancy monitoring. Leveraging existing local efforts to achieve high detection probability and baseline sampling would reduce financial and logistical burdens of broad-scale wildlife monitoring efforts.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1470160X
Volume :
169
Issue :
112863-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Ecological Indicators
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.48b38214835c45f4bc417643d4afeb86
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2024.112863