An Integrated Approach for Predicting Fates of Reintroductions with Demographic Data from Multiple Populations; Un Método Integral para la Predicción del Destino de Reintroducciones con Datos Demográficos de Múltiples Poblaciones

We devised a novel approach to model reintroduced populations whereby demographic data collected from multiple sites are integrated into a Bayesian hierarchical model. Integrating data from multiple reintroductions allows more precise population-growth projections to be made, especially for populati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Conservation biology 2012-02, Vol.26 (1), p.97
Hauptverfasser: PARLATO, ELIZABETH H, ARMSTRONG, DOUG P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We devised a novel approach to model reintroduced populations whereby demographic data collected from multiple sites are integrated into a Bayesian hierarchical model. Integrating data from multiple reintroductions allows more precise population-growth projections to be made, especially for populations for which data are sparse, and allows projections that account for random site-to-site variation to be made before new reintroductions are attempted. We used data from reintroductions of the North Island Robin (Petroica longipes), an endemic New Zealand passerine, to 10 sites where non-native mammalian predators are controlled. A comparison of candidate models that we based on deviance information criterion showed that rat-tracking rate (an index of rat density) was a useful predictor of robin fecundity and adult female survival, that landscape connectivity and a binary measure of whether sites were on a peninsula were useful predictors of apparent juvenile survival (probably due to differential dispersal away from reintroduction sites), and that there was unexplained random variation among sites in all demographic rates. We used the two best supported models to estimate the finite rate of increase (λ) for populations at each of the 10 sites, and for a proposed reintroduction site, under different levels of rat control. Only three of the reintroduction sites had λ distributions completely >1 for either model. At two sites, λ was expected to be >1 if rat-tracking rates were
ISSN:0888-8892
1523-1739
DOI:10.1111/j.1523-1739.2011.01794.x