Close-Kin Mark-Recapture Models
Type
Master thesisNot peer reviewed

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Date
2019-07-09Author
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Close-Kin Mark-Recapture (CKMR) is a recent extension of the ordinary mark–recapture methods used to estimate animal abundance and other population parameters. Where ordinary
mark–recapture only consider the subsequent identification of the same animal a recapture,
CKMR expands this by also viewing the genetic identification of a relatives as a recapture.
One of the challenges of CKMR models compared to ordinary mark–recapture is that the
recapture probabilities are tightly coupled to the life histories of the animals in questions.
This thesis contains three different contributions to the CKMR literature. Firstly I develop
a CKMR estimator for age structured populations, presented in Ruzzante (2019). Secondly, I
develop theoretical background for half sibling CKMR analysis, and apply kin analysis to data
from the River Etne. Thirdly, it expands on the results from Skaug (2017) and derives several
new results for the case where age of both parent and offspring is unknown.
The first part contains the method development of a parent–offspring CKMR model for
brook trout populations, electrofished yearly in the period 2013-2018. I here develop a moment
estimator for population size for an age structured model, related to the Lincoln–Petersen
estimator. The estimator is applied under two different population assumptions, stable age
structure, and variable recruitment and representative sampling. Special focus is on the small
population situation, where large sample approximations used in previous CKMR studies cannot be assumed. A small sample bias correction for the estimator is developed and validated
using parametric bootstrap simulations. Using the perspective that the parent marks the offspring instead of the commonly used offspring marks juvenile, a simple and general form of
the estimator is derived. Viewing offspring as the marked part of the population also leads to
an expression for the variance of the expected number of parent–offspring pairs in a sample,
which is found to be less than the Poisson variance unless fecundity is very overdispersed.
The second part contains theoretical background and model development for half sibling
CKMR analysis, to examine the conditions under which same cohort siblings are suitable for
CKMR analysis. A half sibling kinship analysis of single year data set of Atlantic salmon from
the River Etne 2013 is performed to check if it is suitable for CKMR.
In the third part, the probability that an individual has a living parent in an age structured
population is discussed in detail. For the case where age information for both parent and
offspring is unavailable, I derive two useful expressions for the probability of a living parent
when mortality is constant, or constant after onset of maturity. With the additional assumption
of constant population size, this probability is shown to be 1/2, similar to what is previously
proved for constant fecundity.
Publisher
The University of BergenSubject
Lincoln-Petersen estimatorAge StructuredPopulationsCKMRDemographyClose-Kin Mark-RecaptureStable Age DistributionKinshipCollections
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