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Published byVictor Hancock Modified over 8 years ago
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Sampling Plan for the Marshbird Monitoring Program
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Constraints & Requirements Plan must be habitat-based Sampling intensity will vary Many areas will not be accessible Habitat locations will change Consistency with plans for other groups Plan must be practical
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Proposed Plan Delineate regions Identify “designated areas” in each region (they comprise the target population for the region) Describe each area Group designated areas into strata Select survey locations in each stratum Prepare sampling plans for each stratum
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Bird Conservation Sub-regions
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Identify Designated Areas 1984 DAs; 641 important to secretive marshbirds
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Describe Each Area “Guidelines for preparing aquatic site descriptions” (PIF Symposium) Contents –Boundaries and ownership –Focal species using the site and timing of use –Location of good and fair habitat within the site –Access to the good and fair habitat and visibility –Past and current surveys –Potential survey methods –Needed pilot studies >200 descriptions done
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Prepare BCS Sampling Plan ID the DAs that have any of the focal species Form strata, each of which will be surveyed Prepare sampling plans for each stratum
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Example BCS has 1 NWR, 6 WMAs, an area of playa lakes, 10 small wetlands each of which is a DA, an area of low density birds. StrataDAsStrataDAs 1NWR56 wetlands 23 WMAs6the playas 33 WMAs7low density area 44 wetlands
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NWI Coverage
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Sampling Plans Within Strata
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Guidelines for Sampling Plans Target population must be well-defined (e.g, so its size can be calculated) Can include only good habitat or not Can change between (or within) years Suggest distributing evenly (stations or clusters)
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Implications for Database Design Value exists in designing the database for many different groups. Can have 5 spatial, and 4 temporal, levels, so need up to 9 (or 10) “level” sampling Need “size” and number of sub-units for each unit at each level This information must be in the database We are developing one to hold it – for regional use. I know of no others. With 10-stage sample, and variable sized units at each level, analysis will be complex using either survey sampling or mixed models.
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Example of Implementation
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Number of areas Number known to be important for… StateWaterfowlWaterbirdsShorebirds Arizona42153213 California40202219 Colorado4402922 Idaho527324 Montana2121213 Nevada4815202 New Mexico3792012 Oregon40302813 Utah41172720 Washington18743 Wyoming412310 All424145227121
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StatePreparedNot prepared Proportion prepared Arizona0420.00 California0400.00 Colorado17270.39 Idaho5020.96 Montana1560.71 Nevada25230.52 New Mexico0370.00 Oregon0400.00 Utah30110.73 Washington0180.00 Wyoming0410.00 Grand Total1372680.34
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Survey Aerial Water- fowl Ground- based waterbird Secretive Marshbird Migrating Shorebird Breeding Colonies All surveys Existing survey117119 44 29 79 388 No survey at present 28112 73 93 64 370 Volunteers could conduct 7 30 40 30 34 141 Volunteers could help 0 13 4 5 4 26 Staff would conduct 0 46 23 42 24 135 Survey would be difficult 21 23 6 16 2 68 Information lacking2631912932762421265 1.44 secretive marshbird surveys at present 2.Opportunities for 73 more 3.Volunteers could do 40 of them 4.Staff would need to help or do all of 27 surveys 5.Only 6 would be difficult
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Reports: IWCBM Overview, Progress Report, Aquatic Bird Survey, Terrestrial Bird Survey, Data Management System, Analytic Tools, others
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Major Obstacles Getting data contributed Getting surveyors, especially for low density areas Non-Obstacles Designing sampling plans (once labor available and practical constraints are known)
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Roles and Responsibilities USGS – Oversight, design, web site IWJV - Implementation –Don Paul: UT, NV, CA –Dan Casey: MT, ID, WY –Bob Vahle: NM, AZ, CO –Joe Latourette: WA –Bruce : OR WWG – Forum for decisions States, NWRs, Bd. Obs. – Conduct surveys
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Next Steps Review DAs Encourage prep’n of area descriptions Hold meetings to consider which sites can be surveyed Design BCS and strata sampling plans Select survey locations in every stratum Recruit surveyors for as many as possible Finish web site & data base Work on analytic methods
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Summary and Conclusions Comprehensive plan now developed I believe plan is flexible and practical enough, but independent review needed. Easy to carry out with other surveys. Need more people trying to use it, especially at the BCS level and in new habitats (e.g., coastal marshes) No databases exist to hold all the data Developing analytic methods will be non-trivial.
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