We hope to use occupancy data to determine if there is a negative relationship between river otter and muskrats on streams in Kentucky. The hypothesis is that otter reintroduction negatively affects muskrat populations.
Our idea is to look for otter and muskrat sign upstream from randomly selected bridge crossings. We would repeatedly sample the sites to estimate occurrence and detection probabilities, using covariates to account for habitat differences, factors affecting detectability, etc. The model and test criteria to detect multi-species interactions seem pretty straightforward. My question is about study design.
Would it be legitimate to sample several sections of stream at each bridge crossing, counting each section (say 100m) as a sampling event? This would be more cost effective (less gasoline) than repeatedly visiting the same sites. Spatially, our assumption of course is that otters and muskrats would be equally present/not present for all of the stream sections at a bridge crossing. Would this approach be reasonable? Thanks!