Monte Carlo estimation of stage structured development from cohort data

被引:6
|
作者
Knape, Jonas [1 ,2 ]
de Valpine, Perry [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[2] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Dept Ecol, S-75007 Uppsala, Sweden
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 瑞典研究理事会;
关键词
Arthropod; cohort; individual variation MCMC; mortality; phenology; stage duration; stage structured development; PESTICIDES; MORTALITY; MODELS;
D O I
10.1890/15-0942.1
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Cohort data are frequently collected to study stage-structured development and mortalities of many organisms, particularly arthropods. Such data can provide information on mean stage durations, among-individual variation in stage durations, and on mortality rates. Current statistical methods for cohort data lack flexibility in the specification of stage duration distributions and mortality rates. In this paper, we present a new method for fitting models of stage-duration distributions and mortality to cohort data. The method is based on a Monte Carlo within MCMC algorithm and provides Bayesian estimates of parameters of stage-structured cohort models. The algorithm is computationally demanding but allows for flexible specifications of stage-duration distributions and mortality rates. We illustrate the algorithm with an application to data from a previously published experiment on the development of brine shrimp from Mono Lake, California, through nine successive stages. In the experiment, three different food supply and temperature combination treatments were studied. We compare the mean duration of the stages among the treatments while simultaneously estimating mortality rates and among-individual variance of stage durations. The method promises to enable more detailed studies of development of both natural and experimental cohorts. An R package implementing the method and which allows flexible specification of stage duration distributions is provided.
引用
收藏
页码:992 / 1002
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Estimation of mortality for stage-structured zooplankton populations: What is to be done?
    Ohman, Mark D.
    JOURNAL OF MARINE SYSTEMS, 2012, 93 : 4 - 10
  • [2] MONTE CARLO ESTIMATION OF ECONOMIC CAPITAL
    Kaplan, Zachary T.
    Li, Yajuan
    Nakayama, Marvin K.
    2018 WINTER SIMULATION CONFERENCE (WSC), 2018, : 1754 - 1765
  • [3] Estimation of General Multistage Models From Cohort Data
    de Valpine, Perry
    Knape, Jonas
    JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL BIOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STATISTICS, 2015, 20 (01) : 140 - 155
  • [4] Excess risk estimation for matched cohort survival data
    Boschini, Cristina
    Andersen, Klaus K.
    Scheike, Thomas H.
    STATISTICAL METHODS IN MEDICAL RESEARCH, 2019, 28 (10-11) : 3451 - 3465
  • [5] Estimation of Plant Demographic Parameters from Stage-Structured Censuses
    David, Olivier
    Garnier, Aurelie
    Laredo, Catherine
    Lecomte, Jane
    BIOMETRICS, 2010, 66 (03) : 875 - 882
  • [6] Environmental factors in frontier estimation - A Monte Carlo analysis
    Nieswand, Maria
    Seifert, Stefan
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF OPERATIONAL RESEARCH, 2018, 265 (01) : 133 - 148
  • [7] Estimated development times for stage-structured marine organisms are biased if based only on survivors
    Bi, Hongsheng
    Feinberg, Leah
    Shaw, C. Tracy
    Peterson, William T.
    JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH, 2011, 33 (05) : 751 - 762
  • [8] Estimation of extreme response of floating bridges by Monte Carlo simulation
    OleOseth
    Ronnquist, Anders
    Naess, Arvid
    Sigbjornsson, Ragnar
    EURODYN 2014: IX INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS, 2014, : 2905 - 2912
  • [9] Bayesian Monte Carlo method for nuclear data evaluation
    Koning, A. J.
    EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL A, 2015, 51 (12) : 1 - 16
  • [10] Infectious Disease Dynamics Inferred from Genetic Data via Sequential Monte Carlo
    Smith, R. A.
    Ionides, E. L.
    King, A. A.
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2017, 34 (08) : 2065 - 2084