Dear Ecolog users,
I am a PhD candidate working on the impact of a wild herbivore on the plant and 
animal communities of a protected habitat. 
My work has involved the spatial interpolation of animal occurrences to model 
what I called 'the spatial variation of densities'. 
However, recent comments about that piece of work said “the scale at which the 
study was undertaken was too fine to model density........what is modelled is 
occupancy, or usage...” and "...you are not measuring population density, but 
usage of the environment... and thus technically you are deriving a surrogate 
for relative patterns of habitat use/preference, not population density as 
such".

I thought that 'usage' was related to two components: 'intensity' and 'time', 
instead it seems that using 'density' or 'usage' is dependant on the spatial 
scale (landscape vs. local) at which the analysis is conducted. 

I have tried to find a good reference to support the idea that because I am 
measuring occurrences at a fine spatial scale I cannot use the term 'density' 
and instead I should use 'usage' or even 'occupancy' but I have not been able 
to find anything yet.

I was wondering if you could share your thoughts about these two terms, maybe 
you have been faced with the same dilemma? also a reference to support the use 
of the term 'usage' instead of 'density' would be just fantastic...as my mum 
always says 'you can only ask...' :-)

Thank-you for your time,

Regards
Antonio


+ Antonio Uzal Fernandez
   Postgraduate Researcher
Bournemouth University
UK
 
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