Abstract
There are many reasons why we are interested in how long wild animals survive. A particularly pressing one is so that we can evaluate the effects of climate and anthropomorphic changes. In an early example, North and Morgan (1979) demonstrated a link between winter temperature and the survival of grey herons, Ardea cinerea, using point-process models as well as logistic regression, as in Sect. 5.1. As a further example, one might be interested in calibrating the effect of a change in hunting regulations on survival probability of wild fowl.
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Newman, K.B. et al. (2014). Estimating Survival Probabilities from Mark-Re-Encounter Data. In: Modelling Population Dynamics. Methods in Statistical Ecology. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-0977-3_7
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