Publication | Open Access
Unified Maximum Likelihood Estimates for Closed Capture–Recapture Models Using Mixtures
536
Citations
45
References
2000
Year
Homogeneous Capture ProbabilitiesEngineeringPopulation EcologySpecie DistributionWildlife EcologyMixture AnalysisMammalogyBiostatisticsEstimation TheoryStatistical ModelingStatisticsMaximum LikelihoodFinite MixturesBiodiversityMaximum Likelihood EstimatesSampling (Statistics)Wildlife ManagementStatistical InferenceWildlife BiologyMedicineAnimal Behavior
Agresti (1994, Biometrics 50, 494-500) and Norris and Pollock (1996a, Biometrics 52, 639-649) suggested using methods of finite mixtures to partition the animals in a closed capture-recapture experiment into two or more groups with relatively homogeneous capture probabilities. This enabled them to fit the models Mh, Mbh (Norris and Pollock), and Mth (Agresti) of Otis et al. (1978, Wildlife Monographs 62, 1-135). In this article, finite mixture partitions of animals and/or samples are used to give a unified linear-logistic framework for fitting all eight models of Otis et al. by maximum likelihood. Likelihood ratio tests are available for model comparisons. For many data sets, a simple dichotomy of animals is enough to substantially correct for heterogeneity-induced bias in the estimation of population size, although there is the option of fitting more than two groups if the data warrant it.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1