Sarah,
If most sites are being surveyed in consecutive years then there may be some benefit in using the robust design, I didn't appreciate you were doing it year-by-year at the moment.
However, if most sites are only surveyed in 2 or 3 years over the 7 year period, then trying to use the robust design model is likely to create a whole new set of problems. Do you expect the effect of the covariates to be similar in the different years? One thing you could do is to include the detections histories from all sites in all years to a single file (so the same site in different years would have multiple detection histories being entered), and include 'year' has a covariate. You can then consider a range of models that will allow for annual variation, and interactions with and the year covariate if you expect the effect of teh covariate itself to change over time.
When you say there's few detections, is it a case where if the bird species is detected in 1 survey in a year of a particular site, it also likely to be detected in the other surveys (so detection histories tend to be either 111 or 000), or is it a case usually there is only 1 out of 3 detections at a site. If it's the former then that suggests detectability is high so the sparseness is likely caused by the species being rare, but with the latter then the sparseness is likely caused by low detection rates (and/or rarity) so your results may be somewhat flaky because there isn't enough information with only 3 surveys per year to separate out detectability and occupancy.
It may also be a case that the folks you're working with may have to backtrack on what they reliably will be able to tease out from all of this and have to settle for models with only a couple of covariates at a time. There's nothing to say all your candidate models have to be nested.
Cheers
Darryl
Sarah Reed Hurteau wrote:Hi Darryl,
There are 3 surveys per year. But the number of sites and site locations change each year (with some sites being sampled in multiple years). This is why I was analyzing each year separately for each species.
Our objective for this preliminary study is to identify patterns in occupancy that can be used in a predictive model of riparian and upland birds in the Great Basin region.
The group who collected the data came up with the set of candidate models that are being tested, but it seems that there are not enough detections to sufficiently model all the covariates they want to include. I was hoping by combining all 7 years together, a detection history of that length would include enough positive detections to be able to model all of the covariates. But I was not sure how to deal with the fact that the sites are not the same among all the years.
Thanks,
Sarah