In 16 years over 300,000 tagged yearling turtles have been released.
About 300 have been recaptured.
Only one has been recaptured more than once.
Can I still use these data to estimate survival with MARK?
Thank you,
cp
claudiapenaloza wrote:In 16 years over 300,000 tagged yearling turtles have been released.
About 300 have been recaptured.
Only one has been recaptured more than once.
Can I still use these data to estimate survival with MARK?
Thank you,
cp
Eric Janney wrote:I think Evan is correct
that your best bet is to try to use technology to get more recaptures. I had a similar problem doing a fish survival study in a large lake. We tagged and released around 5,000 fish a year but recapture rates were poor (0.02 - 0.10). We tried increasing sampling effort, but the improvement in recapture probabilities was marginal. So, we started using remote underwater PIT tag antennas placed in strategic locations during the spawning season. The improvement in recaptures has been dramatic. We now have recapture probabilities between 0.50 and 1.0. The key to using remote PIT tag technology is to find locations where the animals congregate or migrate through.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests