Hi everybody,
I have a series of Occupancy Estimation models based on presence/absence data of various bird species as determined by point counts. I am running a separate MARK analysis for each of the commonly-detected species (found at >5% of the points). I am using 3 treatment groups and a covariate (shrub cover) which may influence detectability and/or occupancy. Because of this though, I must use the logit link function in MARK. For most species, the best model (as determined by AICc) has at least one non-estimable parameter. Since I have a covariate and had to create my models from the design matrix, I don't have the option of using the sin link function.
I just finished reading the marathon discussion between Evan and Gary regarding parameter counts from the old forum (which doesn't appear to be available any longer, but is cached by Google here if anyone's interested): http://tinyurl.com/434nk
My question is, can I still use these models that have non-estimable parameters? Are they totally invalid, or can I still use them to draw conclusions as to what is affecting detectability and occupancy? An alternate route would be to use my data in a logistic regression-type analysis, but that would be totally discounting detectability which I would rather avoid.
Any advice would be fantastic!
Thanks a lot,
Lucas Habib.
University of Alberta
Edmonton AB
Canada