<p>Comparison of different methods for population size estimates with the partly independent reference population sizes (connected by a line). LP: Lincoln-Petersen; MLP: Multiple Lincoln-Petersen; MPE: Mean Petersen estimate; IntJK: Interpolated jackknife; ME: Moment estimator; SC1: Sample coverage 1; SC2: Sample coverage 2; EE: Estimating equation.</p
<p>Estimated population sizes () of the four locations over the three sampling years.</p
<p>Abbreviations: N1/N2, effective population size ratio between population 1 and population 2; m1-2...
The question ‘How many?’ arises in many scientific areas. To address this question, Capture–recaptur...
<p>Comparison of different methods for population size estimates with the fully independent referenc...
<p><i>f<sub>k</sub></i>: number of individuals captured <i>k</i> times. <i>S</i>: number of distinct...
<p>The dashed horizontal line is the minimum number of population size (600); this is a lower bound ...
<p>(A) Subpopulation means as extracted by the three fitting methods, in all four replicates of the ...
(A) Two example populations with McGurk susceptibility of 45% (Population A, orange) and 55% (Popula...
<p>Effect of the choice of reference population on the estimation of effective population size (N<su...
<p>A) Contemporary effective population size (<i>N<sub>e</sub></i>) for each sample site based on ma...
<p>Comparison of EBSP and simulated population sizes under different structural scenarios.</p
There are many alternative estimation procedures for the classical scenario of probability proportio...
<p>Estimations of cutoff points for populations that have different proportions.</p
An approach to sample size planning for multiple regression is presented that emphasizes accuracy in...
<p>Point estimates are averages across all pairwise comparisons. The highest and lowest values for 9...
<p>Estimated population sizes () of the four locations over the three sampling years.</p
<p>Abbreviations: N1/N2, effective population size ratio between population 1 and population 2; m1-2...
The question ‘How many?’ arises in many scientific areas. To address this question, Capture–recaptur...
<p>Comparison of different methods for population size estimates with the fully independent referenc...
<p><i>f<sub>k</sub></i>: number of individuals captured <i>k</i> times. <i>S</i>: number of distinct...
<p>The dashed horizontal line is the minimum number of population size (600); this is a lower bound ...
<p>(A) Subpopulation means as extracted by the three fitting methods, in all four replicates of the ...
(A) Two example populations with McGurk susceptibility of 45% (Population A, orange) and 55% (Popula...
<p>Effect of the choice of reference population on the estimation of effective population size (N<su...
<p>A) Contemporary effective population size (<i>N<sub>e</sub></i>) for each sample site based on ma...
<p>Comparison of EBSP and simulated population sizes under different structural scenarios.</p
There are many alternative estimation procedures for the classical scenario of probability proportio...
<p>Estimations of cutoff points for populations that have different proportions.</p
An approach to sample size planning for multiple regression is presented that emphasizes accuracy in...
<p>Point estimates are averages across all pairwise comparisons. The highest and lowest values for 9...
<p>Estimated population sizes () of the four locations over the three sampling years.</p
<p>Abbreviations: N1/N2, effective population size ratio between population 1 and population 2; m1-2...
The question ‘How many?’ arises in many scientific areas. To address this question, Capture–recaptur...