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1.
J Fish Biol ; 74(10): 2279-98, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20735553

ABSTRACT

Estimated pike Esox lucius recruitment varied by a factor of 16 for females from 1944 to 1991 and by a factor of 27 for males from 1943 to 1990 in Windermere, a temperate, mesotrophic U.K. lake. No significant stock-recruitment relationships were found, but analysis with general additive models (GAMs) revealed that early autumnal water temperature, strength and direction of the North Atlantic Oscillation displacement (corresponding to different climatic conditions in winter) and zooplankton abundance but above all, late summer water temperature were important explanatory variables over the entire time series. Female recruitment was also influenced by young-of-the-year winter temperature. There was no evidence that perch Perca fluviatilis year-class strength, lake level or the summer position of the Gulf Stream influenced recruitment. The fitted models explained up to c. 65% of the overall observed variation between years.


Subject(s)
Environment , Esocidae/physiology , Fresh Water , Animals , Female , Male , Models, Biological , Population Density , Population Dynamics , Seasons , Temperature , Time Factors , United Kingdom , Zooplankton/physiology
2.
Biometrics ; 62(2): 372-8, 2006 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16918901

ABSTRACT

Mark-recapture models applied to double-observer distance sampling data neglect the information on relative detectability of objects contained in the distribution of observed distances. A difference between the observed distribution and that predicted by the mark-recapture model is symptomatic of a failure of the assumption of zero correlation between detection probabilities implicit in the mark-recapture model. We develop a mark-recapture-based model that uses the observed distribution to relax this assumption to zero correlation at only one distance. We demonstrate its usefulness in coping with unmodeled heterogeneity using data from an aerial survey of crabeater seals in the Antarctic.


Subject(s)
Biometry , Animals , Animals, Wild , Antarctic Regions , Data Collection , Likelihood Functions , Models, Statistical , Population Density , Sampling Studies , Seals, Earless
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