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Monitoring abundance

Jonathan Bart,Michael A. Fligner,William I. Notz-1998-12-10-Cambridge University Press eBooks
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TL;DRAbstract

Monitoring abundance means estimating trends in abundance, usually through time though occasionally across space or with respect to some other variable. Estimating temporal trends in abundance of animal populations is a common objective in both applied and theoretical research. The most common design involves surveys in the same locations run once or more per year for several years. The data are often collected using ‘index methods’ in which the counts are not restricted to well-defined plots or if they are the animals present are not all detected and the fraction detected is not known. Results are usually summarized by calculating the mean number of animals detected per plot, route, or some other measure of effort, during each period. These means are then plotted against time (Fig. 8.1). When the counts come from complete surveys of well-defined plots, then the Y-axis is in density units. In the more common case of index data, the Y-axis shows the number recorded per survey route or s

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Monitoring abundance means estimating trends in abundance, usually through time though occasionally across space or with respect to some other variable. Estimating temporal trends in abundance of animal populations is a common objective in both applied and theoretical research. The most common design involves surveys in the same locations run once or more per year for several years. The data are often collected using ‘index methods’ in which the counts are not restricted to well-defined plots or if they are the animals present are not all detected and the fraction detected is not known. Results are usually summarized by calculating the mean number of animals detected per plot, route, or some other measure of effort, during each period. These means are then plotted against time (Fig. 8.1). When the counts come from complete surveys of well-defined plots, then the Y-axis is in density units. In the more common case of index data, the Y-axis shows the number recorded per survey route or s

Keywords

Abundance (ecology)Environmental scienceGeographyBiologyEcology

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