national marsh bird monitoring: methods, pilot study, and where we go from here 16 january 2013

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National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013 Mark Seamans U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Lakewood, CO

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National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013. Mark Seamans U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Lakewood, CO. Webinar Outline. Background History of Marsh Bird Monitoring Survey Protocol and Sampling Design Pilot Study Methods Results - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

National Marsh Bird Monitoring:Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here

16 January 2013

Mark SeamansU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Lakewood, CO

Page 2: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Webinar Outline

• Background– History of Marsh Bird Monitoring– Survey Protocol and Sampling Design

• Pilot Study– Methods– Results

• Transition from Pilot to Operational Program

Page 3: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Target Species

• Rallidae: clapper rail, black rail, king rail, sora, Virginia rail, and yellow rail, common moorhen, purple gallinule, American Coot, purple swamphen

• Ardeidae: American bittern, least bittern• Aramidae: limpkin• Podicipedidae: pied-billed grebe• Scolopacidae: Wilson’s snipe

Page 4: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Background

• Workshops– 1998, 2006, 2011

• King Rail Conservation Plan 2006• Waterbird Conservation for the Americas

(Waterbirds Initiative) 2006 Assessment• AFWA-Webless Funding Priorities Report 2008• Independent research

Page 5: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Background Continued

• Survey Protocol– Courtney Conway– http://www.cals.arizona.edu/research/azfwru/NationalMarshBird/

– Details of Protocol• Study Design

– Johnson, D. H., J. P. Gibbs, M. Herzog, S. Lor, N. D. Niemuth, C. A. Ribic, M. Seamans, T. L. Shaffer, W. G. Shriver, S. V. Stehman, and W. L. Thompson. 2009. A sampling design framework for monitoring secretive marshbirds. Waterbirds 32:230-215.

Page 6: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Example of Hexagon Selection

Page 7: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Example of Point Selection in Hexes

Page 8: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013
Page 9: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Pilot Study

• Wisconsin 2008• Idaho 2009 – 2010• Kentucky 2009• New York 2009• Florida 2010• Michigan 2010• Ohio 2011

Page 10: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013
Page 11: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013
Page 12: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

HQ

Page 13: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Objectives of Pilot

• Do protocol and design work together• Sampling effort to achieve certain levels of

precision for abundance or trend estimates. This included thoughts on how to stratify

• As pilot progressed shifted focus to work under a new paradigm– How to use monitoring to address management issues– Can monitoring meet information needs for species of

greatest concern

Page 14: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Methods• The Data

– repeat visits within & among years, strata– Individuals identified (counted) each survey– Distance to individual estimated– Two-stage sample (variance estimator)– Covariates related to detection and abundance

• Analysis– Binomial Mixture Model with Horvitz-Thompson Estimator

• Detection related to distance done first– Zero-inflated Poisson model with Bayesian Framework– Abundance (& Occupancy) estimated by strata & year

Page 15: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

RESULTS

Page 16: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013
Page 17: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Pilot Results: Abundance

ID KY MI NY OH WI0

10,000

20,000

30,000

40,000

50,000

American Bittern

200920102011

Abun

danc

e

ID KY MI NY OH WI0

50,000

100,000

150,000

200,000

Sora

200920102011

Abun

danc

e

Page 18: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Pilot Results: Abundance

ID KY MI NY OH WI0

50,000

100,000

Virginia Rail

200920102011

Abun

danc

e

FL0

200,000

400,000

600,000

800,000

1,000,000

1,200,000

Clapper Rail

20102011

Abun

danc

e

Page 19: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Pilot Results: OccupancyFlorida Clapper Rail

2010: φ = 0.81 (0.70-0.92) 95% CI 2011: φ = 0.90 (0.80-0.97)

Idaho Sora High Quality Stratum2009: φ = 0.76 (0.63-0.83) 2010: φ = 0.86 (0.76-0.95)

General Stratum2009: φ = 0.38 (0.18-0.76) 2010: φ = 0.21 (0.10-0.39)

Wisconsin Sora2009: φ = 0.59 (0.50-0.70) 2010: φ = 0.49 (0.38-0.64) 2011: φ = 0.35 (0.25-0.54)

Page 20: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Clapper Rail Detection Probability

Survey Period

15-31 Mar 1-14 Apr 15-30 Apr 1-14 May 15-31 May

Det

ectio

n P

roba

bilit

y

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

20102011

Page 21: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Detection Probability of American Bittern in Idaho (A) and the

Upper Midwest (B)Survey Period

15-30 April

1-14 May

15-31 May

1-14 June

15-30 June

Det

ectio

n P

roba

bilit

y

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

200920102011

Survey Period

15-30 April 1-14 May 15-31 May 1-15 June 16-30 June

Det

ectio

n P

roba

bilit

y

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

20092010

B

A

Page 22: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Precision of N as Function of % PSUs Surveyed

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 700

20

40

60

80

100

120

American bittern sora

Virginia rail

Percentage of Primary Sampling Units Surveyed

Coeffi

cien

t of V

aria

tion

B

Page 23: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Precision of N as Function of # PSUs Surveyed

5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 500

20

40

60

80

100

120

American bittern sora

Virginia rail

Number of Primary Sampling Units Surveyed

Coeffi

cien

t of V

aria

tion

Page 24: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Partitioning Variance

𝑣𝑎𝑟 (�̂� )=𝑁 (𝑁−𝑛 )𝑛 (𝑛−1 ) ∑

𝑖=1

𝑛

(𝑦 𝑖−𝑟 𝑀 𝑖)2+𝑁𝑛 ∑

𝑖=1

𝑛

𝑀𝑖 (𝑀𝑖−𝑚𝑖)𝑠𝑖2

𝑚𝑖

𝑠𝑖2= 1

𝑚𝑖−1∑𝑗=1

𝑚 𝑖

(𝑦 𝑖𝑗− 𝑦 𝑖 )2�̂�=

∑𝑖=1

𝑛

�̂� 𝑖

∑𝑖=1

𝑛

𝑀𝑖

.

�̂� 𝑖=𝑀 𝑖

𝑚𝑖∑𝑗=1

𝑚𝑖

𝑦 𝑖𝑗

Page 25: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Inferences from Pilot

• There are a lot of some species on the landscape

• Rare species are an issue• Omnibus approach to monitoring and what

we did during the Pilot

Page 26: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Inferences Cont.

• What can omnibus approach give us?– Inform harvest management, except for KIRA– Inform state conservation plans? Depends.– May reveal general habitat affinities

• What omnibus approach cannot give us.– An assessment of KIRA or BLRA populations– Why they are declining and what to do about it– How any species responds to habitat management

• Water levels, burning, invasive management, etc.

Page 27: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Proposed Way Forward

• Mix of omnibus and “management monitoring”

• Mix of two would give us:– Experimental comparisons– Efficient way to meet needs of multi-species

survey

Page 28: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

King Rail Management

Page 29: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Data can be used to:

• Nwrp = abundance from treatment areas

• Ngen = abundance from general whole area

• H0: Dwrp = Dgen

• Ntotal = Nwrp + Ngen (a status assessment)

Page 30: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013

Marsh Bird Conservation Program

Steps to Conserving & Managing Marsh Birds1. Define Conservation Issues2. Develop Hypotheses or Management

Objectives3. Develop & Implement Management Actions4. Monitor5. Learn and repeat as necessary

Page 31: National Marsh Bird Monitoring: Methods, Pilot Study, and Where We Go From Here 16 January 2013