Hello,
I have a survey dataset that involves approximately 150 ponds that were visited a single time in one season. The primary survey method involved the use of dip net sweeps around the pond margin (>10 sweeps per pond). We detected 5 native amphibians as well as two nonnative species. We are interested in addressing the effects of the nonnatives on distribution of the natives (we do not have repeated observations of nonnative presence, however, so I don't believe a multi species model is possible).
I would like to know if it would be appropriate to use the Hines et al. 2010 model that accounts for observations which are not sampled with replacement and are non-independent. It seems that we could treat individual net sweeps as the observations and then use nonnative presence (and several environmental variables) as covariates.
This seems a bit unconventional for pond survey data, but would there be any fundamental reasons to avoid this approach? Given that each site was visited once, and essentially only one survey method was used, I don't see how other types of occupancy models would be appropriate.
Thank you very much for your time.
Sincerely,
Dan