I'm working through some CJS analyses and observed known mortalities of six marked individuals. This is out of a total of approximately 400 individuals in the analysis. I denoted these individuals with a "-1" in the freq column. All other individuals received a "1" in the freq column.
When I ran the analysis without the freq column (in other words did not denote the mortalities), the results were very close to the analysis with the mortalities included.
In Chapter 2 of the MARK book, I found some discussion of removing individuals "The negative values indicate to MARK that 23 and 25 individuals in both groups were marked on the 1rst occasion, not seen on the next 2 occasions,were encountered on the fourth occasion, at which time they were removed from the study. Clearly, if they were removed, they cannot have been seen again."
I'm trying to understand how MARK processes these individuals removed. Intuitively, I feel like the presence of mortalities should increase capture probability and decrease apparent survival. But this is apparently not happening in my case.
Can anyone offer some advice or references on how removing individuals affects CJS models in MARK?
Thank you.