I have a question about dealing with censored observations in a mark-recapture analysis.
I am using mark-recapture methods to analyze data for a plant population sampled on three occasions (years). The objective is to estimate the abundance of reproductive adults, and to see if individual covariates influence capture probabilities. The plants can only be identified during ~3 days each year when they produce flowers.
Unfortunately, many of the individuals that were observed in years 1 and 2 were censored during the third occasion. Bad weather prevented us from sampling about half of the study area during the third year. This means that we have exhaustive censuses for years 1 and 2, but only a partial census for year 3.
Is there a rigorous way to deal with these censored observations in a mark-recapture analysis?
One idea I had was to analyze the data in two separate analyses: one for the individuals sampled on three occasions, and one for the individuals sampled on two occasions. I could get separate estimates of abundance for each area, and then add them together to get an aggregate estimate for my entire study site. I could calculate a variance using the delta method. I’d appreciate any comments or suggestions on this approach.
Jim