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Using variance components to estimate power in a hierarchically nested sampling design
Authors:Maria C Dzul  Philip M Dixon  Michael C Quist  Stephen J Dinsmore  Michael R Bower  Kevin P Wilson  D Bailey Gaines
Institution:1. Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management, Iowa State University, 339 Science II, Ames, IA, 50011, USA
2. Department of Statistics, Iowa State University, Snedecor Hall, Ames, IA, 50011, USA
4. Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, U.S. Geological Survey -- Idaho Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID, 82844, USA
3. National Park Service, Death Valley National Park, 1321 South Highway 160 Suite #1, Pahrump, NV, 89048, USA
Abstract:We used variance components to assess allocation of sampling effort in a hierarchically nested sampling design for ongoing monitoring of early life history stages of the federally endangered Devils Hole pupfish (DHP) (Cyprinodon diabolis). Sampling design for larval DHP included surveys (5 days each spring 2007–2009), events, and plots. Each survey was comprised of three counting events, where DHP larvae on nine plots were counted plot by plot. Statistical analysis of larval abundance included three components: (1) evaluation of power from various sample size combinations, (2) comparison of power in fixed and random plot designs, and (3) assessment of yearly differences in the power of the survey. Results indicated that increasing the sample size at the lowest level of sampling represented the most realistic option to increase the survey’s power, fixed plot designs had greater power than random plot designs, and the power of the larval survey varied by year. This study provides an example of how monitoring efforts may benefit from coupling variance components estimation with power analysis to assess sampling design.
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