* Mismeasured mortality: correcting estimates of wolf poaching in the
United States*

Adrian Treves, Kyle A. Artelle, Chris T. Darimont, David R. Parsons.
Journal of Mammalogy 2017, I:10.1093/jmammal/gyx052

(Open Access at http://faculty.nelson.wisc.edu/treves )

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*Abstract*

Measuring rates and causes of mortalities are important in animal
ecology and management. Observing the fates of known individuals is a
common method of estimating life history variables, including mortality
patterns. It has long been assumed that data lost when known animals
disappear were unbiased. We test and reject this assumption under
conditions common to most, if not all, studies using marked animals. We
illustrate the bias for 4 endangered wolf populations in the United
States by reanalyzing data and assumptions about the known and unknown
fates of marked wolves to calculate the degree to which risks of
different causes of death were mismeasured. We find that, when using
traditional methods, the relative risk of mortality from legal killing
measured as a proportion of all known fates was overestimated by
0.05–0.16 and the relative risk of poaching was underestimated by
0.17–0.44. We show that published government estimates are affected by
these biases and, importantly, are underestimating the risk of poaching.
The underestimates have obscured the magnitude of poaching as the major
threat to endangered wolf populations. We offer methods to correct
estimates of mortality risk for marked animals of any taxon and describe
the conditions under which traditional methods produce more or less
bias. We also show how correcting past and future estimates of mortality
parameters can address uncertainty about wildlife populations and
increase the predictability and sustainability of wildlife management
interventions.


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