How to code the age of the nest???

questions concerning analysis/theory using program MARK

How to code the age of the nest???

Postby Florent » Mon Nov 14, 2011 9:56 am

Hi all,

I'm currently working on the reproductive success of a species of gull and I used the programe MARK to estimate nest survival. I have a problem to code my data "age of the nest." In fact in the "help" MARK the age of the nest is encoded relative to its own date of discovery, which can be assessed by various methods such as floating eggs (for example) have a precise initiation date. The age is then obtained, always with positive values.

However, in the "MARK book" the age of nests is coded according to the first date of the nesting season (the first day when we visited the first nest) and most of the data are negative.

So there would be two different approaches to code the age of the nest? Is that one of the two approaches better than the other?

Thank you in advance for your valuable answers.
Florent
 
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Re: How to code the age of the nest???

Postby abreton » Wed Nov 16, 2011 12:28 pm

Not two different approaches, instead, I'd suggest 'two different hypotheses'. In the MARK help file below the example data,

The last variable (an individual covariate) in this example is the age of the nest at the time it was first found -- 4 days old for the first nest. ...[next record in the example] The age of this nest was 11 days when it was found on day 18.


In this example, as you pointed out, each nest is aged according to the day the first egg was laid.

From the MARK Book (page 17-15),

We want to build a model that contains each nest’s age on each day of the nesting
season. Fortunately, we have the covariate AgeDay1, which you may recall tells us the age of the nest
on the 1st day of the nesting season (a negative value for most of the nests!).


Here the reference point for each nest is 1st day of the nesting season rather than, in the MARK Help File, the day that the first egg was laid.

In my view, neither of these are right or wrong, they're just implying different hypotheses. In the example from the MARK Help File, the prediction being tested is nest success is a function of days since the first egg was laid in that nest. In the MARK Book, the prediction being tested is nest success is a function of when the nest was initiated (first egg laid) relative to the beginning of the nesting season.

For the former prediction, perhaps (a competing hypothesis) predators are more likely to locate a nest as days progress into incubation. And the latter, perhaps the arrival of a nest egg predator occurs late in the incubation period...and so late nesting pairs, relative to the start of incubation, have a higher risk of losing their eggs.

andre
abreton
 
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