by Bill Kendall » Thu Nov 17, 2005 4:32 pm
It's not completely clear from the original description whether Darryl's or Gary's response is more pertinent. If the reason that animals in that third state are difficult to define is that they were there but not captured, then the usual multistate model will take care of that probabilistically.
If, in addition, they are skipping and are therefore unavailable, then a 3-state model (one unobservable) is appropriate. It is best to have robust design or telemetry data in this case. There are a number of papers out on estimability issues in this case when there is only one observable and one unobservable state. However, there is little out yet on multiple observable states. An exception is a recent paper by Marc Kery. In either case, as Gary points out, MARK could be used.
If you capture animals in that third state but cannot determine success, then you can treat it as a misclassification problem. As Darryl pointed out, our Ecology paper, along with a 2004 paper in Marine Mammal Science, adjusts for this problem when you have robust design data. In the absence of this type of data, or other supplemental data to inform you, leaving that third state in place as a state for unknowns makes some sense. The only problem there is that you know that mixture could induce heterogeneity in capture, survival, and transition probabilities. This problem is described for the case where sex is sometimes unknown, by Nichols et al. (2004, Ecology December issue)
Cheers,
Bill