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Use of ambiguous detections to improve estimates from species distribution models
Authors:Julie Louvrier  Anja Molinari-Jobin  Marc Kéry  Thierry Chambert  David Miller  Fridolin Zimmermann  Eric Marboutin  Paolo Molinari  Oliver Müeller  Rok ?erne  Olivier Gimenez
Institution:1. CEFE, Univ Montpellier, CNRS, Univ Paul Valéry Montpellier 3, EPHE, IRD, Montpellier, France;2. KORA, Thunstrasse 31, 3074 Muri, Switzerland;3. Swiss Ornithological Institute, 6204 Sempach, Switzerland;4. Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, 16802 U.S.A.;5. ONCFS, Gières, France;6. Italian Lynx Project, 33018 Tarvisio, Italy;7. National Office of Forests, Vaduz, Liechtenstein;8. Slovenia Forest Service, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Abstract:As large carnivores recover throughout Europe, their distribution needs to be studied to determine their conservation status and assess the potential for human-carnivore conflicts. However, efficient monitoring of many large carnivore species is challenging due to their rarity, elusive behavior, and large home ranges. Their monitoring can include opportunistic sightings from citizens in addition to designed surveys. Two types of detection errors may occur in such monitoring schemes: false negatives and false positives. False-negative detections can be accounted for in species distribution models (SDMs) that deal with imperfect detection. False-positive detections, due to species misidentification, have rarely been accounted for in SDMs. Generally, researchers use ad hoc data-filtering methods to discard ambiguous observations prior to analysis. These practices may discard valuable ecological information on the distribution of a species. We investigated the costs and benefits of including data types that may include false positives rather than discarding them for SDMs of large carnivores. We used a dynamic occupancy model that simultaneously accounts for false negatives and positives to jointly analyze data that included both unambiguous detections and ambiguous detections. We used simulations to compare the performances of our model with a model fitted on unambiguous data only. We tested the 2 models in 4 scenarios in which parameters that control false-positive detections and true detections varied. We applied our model to data from the monitoring of the Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx) in the European Alps. The addition of ambiguous detections increased the precision of parameter estimates. For the Eurasian lynx, incorporating ambiguous detections produced more precise estimates of the ecological parameters and revealed additional occupied sites in areas where the species is likely expanding. Overall, we found that ambiguous data should be considered when studying the distribution of large carnivores through the use of dynamic occupancy models that account for misidentification.
Keywords:false positives  large carnivores  lynx  occupancy models  species imperfect detection  carnívoros mayores  detección imperfecta de especies  lince  modelos de ocupación  positivos falsos  假阳性  大型食肉动物  猞猁  占据模型  物种不充分检测
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