Hierarchical bayes estimation of hunting success rates

被引:4
|
作者
He Z. [1 ,3 ,4 ]
Sun D. [2 ,3 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Fishery and Wildlife Research Center, Missouri Department of Conservation, 1110 South College Avenue, Columbia
[2] Department of Statistics, University of Missouri-Columbia, 323 Mathematical Sciences Building, Columbia
[3] Department of Statistics, University of Missouri-Columbia
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Bayes estimation; Harvest survey; Hierarchical model; Small area; Small sample size; Success rate;
D O I
10.1023/A:1009669302755
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Although most post-season harvest surveys are conducted at the state level, the effective management of wildlife populations often requires estimates of hunting success rate, hunting pressure and harvest at the sub-area (such as management unit, regional, or county) level. Sample sizes for some sub-areas are often very small or even zero. Because of small sample sizes, estimates for small sub-areas often yield unacceptably large standard errors. In this article, a hierarchical Bayes model is used to estimate hunting success rates at the sub-area level from post-season harvest surveys. The computation is done by Gibbs sampling and adaptive rejection sampling techniques. The method is illustrated using data from the Missouri Turkey Hunting Survey 1994 Spring Season. The Bayesian estimates are close to the frequency estimates for the sub-areas with large sample sizes and more stable than the frequency estimates for those with small sample sizes. The Bayesian estimates will be more useful to wildlife biologists in establishing hunting regulation on small sub-areas at no additional survey cost.
引用
收藏
页码:223 / 236
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Hierarchical Bayes estimation of hunting success rates
    Hei, ZQ
    Sun, DC
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL AND ECOLOGICAL STATISTICS, 1998, 5 (03) : 223 - 236
  • [2] Hierarchical Bayes estimation of hunting success rates with spatial correlations
    He, ZQ
    Sun, DC
    [J]. BIOMETRICS, 2000, 56 (02) : 360 - 367
  • [4] Hierarchical Bayes estimation of unemployment rates for the states of the US
    Datta, GS
    Lahiri, P
    Maiti, T
    Lu, KL
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN STATISTICAL ASSOCIATION, 1999, 94 (448) : 1074 - 1082
  • [5] Hierarchical Bayes estimation of mortality rates for disease mapping
    Maiti, T
    [J]. JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL PLANNING AND INFERENCE, 1998, 69 (02) : 339 - 348
  • [6] Hunting rates and hunting success in the spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta)
    Holekamp, KE
    Smale, L
    Berg, R
    Cooper, SM
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 1997, 242 : 1 - 15
  • [7] Hierarchical Bayes multivariate estimation of poverty rates based on increasing thresholds for small domains
    Fabrizi, Enrico
    Ferrante, Maria Rosaria
    Pacei, Silvia
    Trivisano, Carlo
    [J]. COMPUTATIONAL STATISTICS & DATA ANALYSIS, 2011, 55 (04) : 1736 - 1747
  • [8] Empirical Bayes and hierarchical Bayes estimation of skew normal populations
    Bansal, Naveen K.
    Maadooliat, Mehdi
    Wang, Xiaowei
    [J]. COMMUNICATIONS IN STATISTICS-THEORY AND METHODS, 2008, 37 (07) : 1024 - 1037
  • [9] A Bayes Linear Bayes Method for Estimation of Correlated Event Rates
    Quigley, John
    Wilson, Kevin J.
    Walls, Lesley
    Bedford, Tim
    [J]. RISK ANALYSIS, 2013, 33 (12) : 2209 - 2224
  • [10] ROBUST HIERARCHICAL BAYES ESTIMATION OF EXCHANGEABLE MEANS
    ANGERS, JF
    BERGER, JO
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF STATISTICS-REVUE CANADIENNE DE STATISTIQUE, 1991, 19 (01): : 39 - 56