Hello All,
I will preface my post in that I have read all relevant chapters in the MARK manual related to overdispersion. I have also reviewed the only 2 posts related to this matter for nest survival models which somewhat gave different thoughts.
My main question is does one need to correct for overdispersion in Nest Survival models?
A post by cooch in 2006 said c-hat >1 “isn’t relevant for nest survival” data and shouldn’t be done. However, MARK output still provides a c-hat value, -log2L values, etc. where you could divide the deviance by df by hand and get c-hat as well. There are some very recent nest survival papers published that have corrected for overdispersion (e.g. http://talltimbers.org/wp-content/uploa ... al2015.pdf).
The only options available for Nest Survival are the LRT and reviewing deviance/pearson residuals.
My concern is that according to deviance residual plots and MARK calculated c-hat values, both my standard (general/constant with no covariates) models and saturated model (including all possible covariates) are highly over-dispersed; both have c-hat values around 2.7 and 2.8. Deviance residual plots are all above 0 (so no spread above and below zero) with a few outside the interval.
I recall in the manual that c-hat values <3 can be ok, but my second question is how "relevant" are c-hat values in a nest survival model? Basically, should I be concerned given my data?
All nests were checked/monitored consistently across years following the same standard avian protocols. I have 280 nests over a 6 year period in one group (Year is a covariate modelled as several dummy covs but has no overall support); I have up to 12 covariates but never are all of them in one model if I take a 2-stage modelling approach. Two of these variables are time-within season (linear and quadratic), and a third is Nest Age. Nesting season is 77 days over a 3.5 month period. I'm taking the top temporal covariates from an initial model and using it as a baseline in a second, final model that has habitat covariates (similar to paper listed above).
From forum users’ experience, what is typically the source of overdispersion in nest survival models?
I apologize in advance if I am naive in asking any of these questions and overlooked something.
Thanks for everyone’s time!