Dear MARMAM readers,

My co-authors and I would like to announce our recent publication in Methods in 
Ecology and Evolution:

Chabanne, D.B.H., Pollock, K.H., Finn, H. and Bejder, L. 2017 Applying the 
Multistate Capture-recapture Robust Design to characterize metapopulation 
structure. Methods in Ecology and Evolution. Doi: 10.1111/2041-210X.12792


ABSTRACT

1. Population structure must be considered when developing mark-recapture (MR) 
study designs as the sampling of individuals from multiple populations (or 
subpopulations) may increase heterogeneity in individual capture probability. 
Conversely, the use of an appropriate MR study design which accommodates 
heterogeneity associated with capture-occasion varying covariates due to 
animals moving between 'states' (i.e. geographic sites) can provide insight 
into how animals are distributed in a particular environment and the status and 
connectivity of subpopulations.
2. The Multistate Closed Robust Design (MSCRD) was chosen to investigate: 1) 
the demographic parameters of Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops 
aduncus) subpopulations in coastal and estuarine waters of Perth, Western 
Australia; and 2) how they are related to each other in a metapopulation. Using 
four years of year-round photo-identification surveys across three geographic 
sites, we accounted for heterogeneity of capture probability based on how 
individuals distributed themselves across geographic sites and characterized 
the status of subpopulations based on their abundance, survival and 
interconnection.
3. MSCRD models highlighted high heterogeneity in capture probabilities and 
demographic parameters between sites. High capture probabilities, high survival 
and constant abundances described a subpopulation with high fidelity in an 
estuary. In contrast, low captures, permanent and temporary emigration and 
fluctuating abundances suggested transient use and low fidelity in an open 
coastline site.
4. Estimates of transition probabilities also varied between sites, with 
estuarine dolphins visiting sheltered coastal embayments more regularly than 
coastal dolphins visited the estuary, highlighting some dynamics within the 
metapopulation.
5. Synthesis and applications. To date, bottlenose dolphin studies using 
mark-recapture approach have focused on investigating single subpopulations. 
Here, in a heterogeneous coastal-estuarine environment, we demonstrated that 
spatially structured bottlenose dolphin subpopulations contained distinct 
suites of individuals and differed in size, demographics and connectivity. Such 
insights into the dynamics of a metapopulation can assist in local-scale 
species conservation. The MSCRD approach is applicable to species/populations 
consisting of recognizable individuals and is particularly useful for 
characterizing wildlife subpopulations that vary in their vulnerability to 
human activities, climate change or invasive species.

You can access the article at: https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210X.12792

If you cannot download the publication, you can request a pdf by emailing to: 
d.chaba...@murdoch.edu.au


Delphine Chabanne
Ph.D. candidate
Murdoch University Cetacean Research Unit
School of Veterinary and Life Sciences
Murdoch University, Western Australia
Murdoch, WA 6150, Australia

http://mucru.org/group-members/delphine-chabanne/
http://mucru.org/research-projects/coastal-and-estuarine-dolphin-project/

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