Hello,
We are analyzing data from a study we conducted last summer to evaluate abundances of the Coachella Valley Fringe-toed lizard.
Our data set consists of capture-recapture information from four sites with one or two plots per site. We had yearlings and adults at 3 sites and adults only at 1 site. In total, we partitioned the data set into eight groups (e.g., plot 1 adults, plot 1 juveniles, plot 2 adults, plot 2 juv, etc...). Our goal is to obtain abundance estimates for each group.
We compared 8 closed population models that evaluated effects on det probability of site, initial and subsequent capture, and individual heterogeneity. The best supported model was one that included all factors: pi(.)p(c+site)N(plot,age). However, total captures were low at some sites resulting in high CI around estimates of N for some groups or even failure to produce an estimate in one case.
I also ran a MCMC analysis for the best supported model. Here, real estimates of N for each group produced much tighter CIs. My question is what is the utility of the estimates for abundance estimates from the MCMC analysis. Can I justify using these values for our abundance estimates?
Also, if anyone has any other suggestions for how to analyze this data to obtain better estimates of N for each group, I would appreciate it.
Thank you,
Andrew