4.5 Article

Estimating resource selection with count data

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 3, 期 7, 页码 2233-2240

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.617

关键词

Generalized linear model; habitat use; overdispersion; panel data; Poisson regression; resource selection probability function

资金

  1. Western EcoSystems Technology, Inc.

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Resource selection functions (RSFs) are typically estimated by comparing covariates at a discrete set of used locations to those from an available set of locations. This RSF approach treats the response as binary and does not account for intensity of use among habitat units where locations were recorded. Advances in global positioning system (GPS) technology allow animal location data to be collected at fine spatiotemporal scales and have increased the size and correlation of data used in RSF analyses. We suggest that a more contemporary approach to analyzing such data is to model intensity of use, which can be estimated for one or more animals by relating the relative frequency of locations in a set of sampling units to the habitat characteristics of those units with count-based regression and, in particular, negative binomial (NB) regression. We demonstrate this NB RSF approach with location data collected from 10 GPS-collared Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus) in the Starkey Experimental Forest and Range enclosure. We discuss modeling assumptions and show how RSF estimation with NB regression can easily accommodate contemporary research needs, including: analysis of large GPS data sets, computational ease, accounting for among-animal variation, and interpretation of model covariates. We recommend the NB approach because of its conceptual and computational simplicity, and the fact that estimates of intensity of use are unbiased in the face of temporally correlated animal location data.

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