4.3 Article

Comparing population growth rates between census and recruitment-mortality models

Journal

JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
Volume 81, Issue 2, Pages 297-305

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jwmg.21185

Keywords

age ratios; census; population trend; Rangifer tarandus caribou; recruitment; survival; validation; woodland caribou

Funding

  1. Government of British Columbia
  2. Fish and Wildlife Compensation Program

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In forested ecosystems, estimating the abundance or trend of most wildlife populations is difficult. Therefore, vital rates are often used to model population change, but validating such models is important. Using data from woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus), we compared estimates of population change () based on vital rate models to based on aerial censuses. We modeled using Hatter and Bergerud's (1991) recruitment-mortality (R-M) equation (=survival/[1-recruitment]). We estimated survival and recruitment from a sample of 317 radio-collared caribou from 9 subpopulations in British Columbia, Canada. In this ecosystem, woodland caribou have high sightability (>85%) in winter and thus are easy to census compared to most forest wildlife. We found that the R-M equation overestimated compared to census-based across most of the observed range of data (e.g., if R-M estimated of 1.1, census-based was 0.99, and if R-M was 0.90, census-based was 0.89). We then assessed whether recruitment, survival, a linear model of both parameters, or the R-M equation best predicted census-based . The R-M equation explained 60% of the variation in census-based , more than double the next-best approach (i.e., the simple linear model), even though identical parameters were included. Further, we simulated variability due to the unknown sex (M:F) ratio in the sample, and found that the R-M equation remained the best predictor of census-based . Although the R-M equation was the most precise and accurate approach, our results reaffirm that it is important to periodically validate trend estimates based on vital rate models with estimates of absolute abundance, particularly for species of management concern. (c) 2016 The Wildlife Society. Monitoring the population trend of forest-dwelling species often relies on trend models based on vital rates (e.g., Leslie matrices), but such models are rarely validated. We compared lambda from trend models to lambda from aerial census for mountain caribou, an animal that is easily counted, and found that vital-rate models can underestimate lambda. We suggest validating trend models with occasional estimates of abundance, and obtaining accurate estimates of survival rates to minimize bias.

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