2021
DOI: 10.1002/2688-8319.12077
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Uncertainty in population estimates: A meta‐analysis for petrels

Abstract: 1. Population estimates are commonly generated and used in conservation science.All estimates carry inherent uncertainty, but little attention has been given to when and how this uncertainty limits their use. This requires an understanding of the specific purposes for which population estimates are intended, an assessment of the level of uncertainty each purpose can tolerate, and information on current uncertainty.2. We conducted a review and meta-analysis for a widespread group of seabirds, the petrels, to be… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…There is no indication that a switch to model-based analyses will overcome the challenges associated with burrowing seabird population estimation and improve estimates for trend detection. Based upon our results and those of other recent studies (Buxton et al 2016, Bird et al 2021 we advocate that studies aiming to detect population trends should focus on constant-effort monitoring approaches rather than collecting intermittent wholeisland population estimates.…”
Section: Design-based Versus Model-based Analysissupporting
confidence: 71%
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“…There is no indication that a switch to model-based analyses will overcome the challenges associated with burrowing seabird population estimation and improve estimates for trend detection. Based upon our results and those of other recent studies (Buxton et al 2016, Bird et al 2021 we advocate that studies aiming to detect population trends should focus on constant-effort monitoring approaches rather than collecting intermittent wholeisland population estimates.…”
Section: Design-based Versus Model-based Analysissupporting
confidence: 71%
“…To evaluate the strength of our unbiased estimators of burrow numbers we simulated declines of 30, 50 and 80% over three generations for Antarctic prions and white-headed petrels following Bird et al (2021) and assessed their power to detect significant differences between repeat estimates (Supporting information).…”
Section: Power Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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