Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of my coauthors, I’m proud to announce the publication of our latest 
paper: 

Huesca-Domínguez I., Morteo E., Abarca-Arenas L.G., Balmer  B.C., Cox T. M., 
Delfín-Alfonso C.A., Hernández-Candelario I.C. Method selection affects the 
estimates of residency and site fidelity in bottlenose dolphins: Testing 
sensitivity and performance of different methods using mark-resight data. PeerJ 
12:e18329.http://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.18329, ISSN 2167-8359

Abstract: 
Residency (R) and site fidelity (SF) are important parameters in population 
ecology, yet their quantification poses challenges in marine mammals. Based on 
a previous review, this study used simulated and empirical mark-resight data to 
assess the variations and performance of the most used R (n = 8) and SF (n = 
11) indices in peer-reviewed literature under different scenarios. We applied 
the Jolly-Seber model to simulate thousands of bottlenose dolphin populations 
varying resighting (p) and survival (Phi) probabilities, and performed 
calibration, sensitivity, and validation analyses. Our results underscore the 
effects of p and Phi on individual categorization within the diverse simulated 
conditions, representing the often-overlooked heterogeneity in residency 
classification for Tursiops populations. All SF indices showed similar and 
consistent performance (>0.70 Gower’s distance) across the simulated scenarios, 
even when compared to field study data from wild dolphin populations (i.e., 
Savannah, USA, and Alvarado, Mexico); thus, SF should be a critical parameter 
for interstudy comparisons. Conversely, R indices were remarkably different 
based on their definitions and classification criteria. The different 
thresholds among definitions largely biased the proportion of residents and 
transient individuals (or occasional visitors) even leading to counterintuitive 
outcomes. This emphasizes the importance of considering trade-offs in R index 
selection aligned with project goals, specific sampling efforts, and population 
dynamics. For instance, the simplified binomial categorization of R defined by 
Conway (2017) (https://digitalcommons.coastal.edu/etd/10/) easier to interpret 
but R indices incorporating temporal components (e.g., monthly, seasonal, and 
annual) outperformed (>0.70 Gower’s distance) other R indices lacking such 
criteria. This allowed for a more detailed representation of the temporal 
structure of the population, and higher consistency and accuracy while 
classifying individuals. Also, although the residency categories proposed by 
Möller, Allen & Harcourt (2002) (DOI 10.1071/AM02011 
<https://doi.org/10.1071/AM02011>) did not perform as well, these seemed to fit 
better when dealing with data gaps across spatial and temporal scales. Our 
results contribute to the ongoing discussion on methodological implications for 
the interpretation of ecological patterns, facilitating a nuanced understanding 
of population dynamics, aiding scientists, and conservation agencies in making 
informed decisions for bottlenose dolphin populations worldwide.

It can be viewed and downloaded for free at: https://peerj.com/articles/18329/

We hope you enjoy our contribution.

Cheers!

Dr. Eduardo Morteo

Director

Instituto de Investigaciones Biológicas
Universidad Veracruzana

Calle Dr. Castelazo Ayala S/N, Col. Industrial Ánimas
CP 91190, Xalapa, Veracruz, México.

Ph/Tel: +52 (228) 841 89 00 
E-mail: emor...@uv.mx

http://www.uv.mx/personal/emorteo/

http://uv-mx.academia.edu/EMorteo
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Eduardo_Morteo/?ev=hdr_xprf

http://scholar.google.com.mx/citations?user=fDUl-IIAAAAJ

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