I’m involved in trying to develop statewide monitoring programs for black bears in 2 states. We’ve been collecting hair sampling data on 3 areas in Louisiana for several years now and I want to help them put together a long term monitoring program. In Florida, they are just on the cusp of starting a new mark-recapture program (last one was 10 years ago) to monitor their statewide population.
I am interested in the paper by Conroy et al. 2008 (Ecology) on 2-phase sampling because I want to monitor abundance in the primary areas inhabited by bears but I also want to track abundance and range expansion in the peripheral areas. This method was interesting because I thought I might be able to use bait-stations (baits suspended from trees with claw marks on the trees as evidence of detection) distributed in primary and secondary areas to estimate occupancy. I would use CMR based on hair DNA to estimate abundance on the primary areas. I would then take advantage of the relationship between detection probability and abundance on the primary areas to extrapolate abundance to the peripheral areas as described in the paper. (My thought was that, at some point, maybe only bait-stations could be used without CMR being necessary in the primary areas every year).
At any rate, the Microtus example used in the paper is different from my situation. First, I wanted to do the 2 phases in reverse, since I already know where the bears are and are not (CMR already done in LA and we know where the bears are in FL from work 10 years ago). Second, I will not be able to do all the CMR sampling at one time in Florida. There, I will be limited to CMR sampling at 1 area at a time and will probably have to use robust design methods because closure probably isn’t met. So it is going to take many years to estimate abundance on all the primary areas (I was thinking I would refine the relationship between detection and abundance as the primary areas are surveyed). However, I think that annual statewide bait-station surveys are do-able in both states. Lastly, the bears are probably distributed more patchily than the Microtus were and we will not be able to conduct many CMR studies. Do you think the Conroy et al.'s approach would work in my 2 situations?
Joe Clark