My sampling units are the 8 fields; yes, I'm interested in the presence/absence of raptors at the scale of the field. I’d like to incorporate occupancy modeling to estimate psi (site use) for control fields and for experimental fields, then use ANOVA to determine differences between treatments. During each survey, I recorded raptor visitation data (e.g. time spent in the field and activities) so that I can also compare numbers of visits and visitation rates, etc.
Revisiting what Darryl had said in his earlier response, if you surveyed 8 fields, and your data are as you show earlier in this thread, then estimating 'occupancy' is done, the answer is 1 as all your sites were occupied by raptors at least once (e.g. you have no all zero sites). If you had the data to compare occupancy probability for treatment vs. control sites (which you don't imho), I would not recommend using AOV, rather you should create a couple of models, one with a effect of group (trt or control), one without that effect, and then see which model was ranked (based on AIC) best (this approach was actually an example in several of the B&A articles and there is an example in the MARKBOOK as well).
I understand about including detection histories from several sites into one file. In addition to the ‘raptors-all species’ detection histories, I have compiled detection histories by species.
It is plausible that you can do species-specific occurrence estimation at the field level (but see Darryl's previous comments on what you are estimating).
I would first like to look for differences between treatments for raptors in general, then for each species. What I’m not clear on is how to create my input files so that I can compare parameter estimates between control and experimental sites. Does it make sense to analyze the 4 control sites in one file, and the 4 experimental sites in another file, then statistically compare the estimates?
Why separate them and then compare statistically? Create one file for each species with a 'group' effect of treatment/not and compare as I outlined above using AIC. FYI, all this is detailed in the MARKBOOK, RTM.
If I am misunderstanding the applicability of occupancy modeling for determining my objectives, can you suggest a more appropriate approach?
My $0.02 (which basically mirrors what Darryl said earlier)-At the 'sample unit' level (field), your data already indicate that occupancy is 1 for all sites (e.g., raptors were located at least 1 time), so estimating occupancy is moot, its 1 for both treatment and control. You might tease out some detection/non-detection stuff as related to use as Darryl indicated, and you might be able to estimate treatment/control at the individual level depending on your data structure for individual species (but with a sample of 8, I doubt seriously you will be able to extract any useful data on the relative effects of the treatment vs. control unless one group is all occupied and one is never occupied, and then is may just be a sampling artifact as I assume that you are likely violating the closure assumption which is needed for the occupancy modeling that you are attempting).
Bret