Dear people,
I have two questions for you (explanation see below):
1) How should I treat dead recoveries in a 'recaptures only' analysis in a migratory species?
(as a '1', because it did survive the wintering period until found dead at the breeding grounds and was resighted, or as a '0' as it is dead?)
2) Can a joint dead recovery/life recapture analysis be performed if both life and dead recoveries occur in the sampling area, due to increased effort? (so F is not necessarily equal to 1)
I have performed a 'recaptures only' analysis on resighting data of colourbanded Black-tailed godwits (a meadow bird species) at two study sites in The Netherlands.
Godwits migrate to West-Africa in winter. Every breeding season I checked the breeding site (which is also the ringing site, godwits are ringed at their nest) for returning godwits. Godwits that died after returning to the breeding site were given a '1' in the encounter history for the past year (even if they were not seen alive at the breeding site that year, previous to being recovered), as they did survive that year. I wonder if this will not overestimate survival.
I considered performing a joint dead recovery/life recapture analysis, but I am not sure whether my data meet the assumptions. Recoveries/ resightings are both done inside my study areas, as only these areas are searched intensively by the researcher, so F is not necessarily equal to 1. Thank you in advance for your help.
Best regards,
Maja Roodbergen