Some colleages and I have a 10-year mark-recapture study on turtles, and one goal is to compare population density at our study site with densities reported in the literature. We used CJS to analzye various aspects of the situation, and reviewers liked what we did.
We then used the POPAN procedure to estimate population size. However, our situation is not well suited to the analysis:
a) over 400 sampling visits to the site, but not at regular intervals,
b) only about 200 captures of 60 individuals so the capture history is very sparse,
c) open system (segment of stream) (comparison studies tend to be regarded as closed (ponds) by the authors)
Manuscript reviewers were not satisfied with this:
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We used the POPAN implementation of the Jolly-Seber model in Program MARK to obtain an estimate of population size that is not provided by the CJS model. This estimate allowed us to determine population density for comparison to other studies. Sparse capture histories relative to the number of sampling trips required us to pool our capture data into calendar years in the POPAN procedure, treating each year as a single survey occasion (Rosen and Lowe, 1996; Cooch and White, 2002), which violates the assumptions of the model somewhat, but yields population size estimates that are not otherwise obtainable.
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We thought that if we pointed out up front that we were violating assumptions, readers would look at our numbers with a grain of salt, but be willing to compare them to population densities in other studies. Instead they insist that we quantify how much our violation of assumptions matters, or throw out our population estimates entirely.
The system is open and turtles are known to move in and out, so I doubt any robust estimates are possible. But if I can't make any comparison to other studies, it kills a big chunk of the paper. We think there is a general trend among published studies for population paramenters to be correlated with elevation, and our POPAN estimates seem to fit that trend and are biologically realistic. But reviewers can't see past our honest admission that we don't meet the assumptions of the method.
Any advice to deal with reviewers, or to come up with population estimates they will like? Any sources we can cite that say that poor estimates are better than none?

Many thanks!
-Frank Hensley