Species distribution models (SDMs) are important management tools for highly mobile marine species because they provide spatially and temporally explicit information on animal distribution. Two prevalent modeling frameworks used to develop SDMs for marine species are generalized additive models (GAMs) and boosted regression trees (BRTs), but comparative studies have rarely been conducted; most rely on presence-only data; and few have explored how features such as species distribution characteristics affect model performance. Since the majority of marine species BRTs have been used to predict habitat suitability, we first compared BRTs to GAMs that used presence/absence as the response variable. We then compared results from these habitat su...
Species Distribution Models (SDMs) are used regularly to develop management strategies, but many mod...
Cetaceans in the North Atlantic are under threat from the increasing pressure and demand placed on t...
Acknowledgments We thank colleagues at the University of Aberdeen, Moray First Marine, NERI, Hi-Def ...
Species distribution models (SDMs) are important management tools for highly mobile marine species b...
Species distribution models are now widely used in conservation and management to predict suitable h...
Species distribution model (SDM) is a crucial tool for forecasting ranges of species and mirroring h...
Author Posting. © Inter-Research, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of Inter-Research...
Species distribution models (SDMs) relate species occurrences, or abundances, with oceanographic or ...
International audienceAim: Accurate predictions of cetacean distributions are essential to their con...
Species distribution models that predict species occurrence or density by quantifying relationships ...
International audienceDespite large efforts, datasets with few sightings are often available for rar...
Despite large efforts, datasets with few sightings are often available for rare species of marine me...
Cetaceans are protected worldwide but vulnerable to incidental harm from an expanding array of human...
© The Author(s), 2016. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attributi...
A major limitation to fully integrated ecosystem based fishery management approaches is a lack of in...
Species Distribution Models (SDMs) are used regularly to develop management strategies, but many mod...
Cetaceans in the North Atlantic are under threat from the increasing pressure and demand placed on t...
Acknowledgments We thank colleagues at the University of Aberdeen, Moray First Marine, NERI, Hi-Def ...
Species distribution models (SDMs) are important management tools for highly mobile marine species b...
Species distribution models are now widely used in conservation and management to predict suitable h...
Species distribution model (SDM) is a crucial tool for forecasting ranges of species and mirroring h...
Author Posting. © Inter-Research, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of Inter-Research...
Species distribution models (SDMs) relate species occurrences, or abundances, with oceanographic or ...
International audienceAim: Accurate predictions of cetacean distributions are essential to their con...
Species distribution models that predict species occurrence or density by quantifying relationships ...
International audienceDespite large efforts, datasets with few sightings are often available for rar...
Despite large efforts, datasets with few sightings are often available for rare species of marine me...
Cetaceans are protected worldwide but vulnerable to incidental harm from an expanding array of human...
© The Author(s), 2016. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attributi...
A major limitation to fully integrated ecosystem based fishery management approaches is a lack of in...
Species Distribution Models (SDMs) are used regularly to develop management strategies, but many mod...
Cetaceans in the North Atlantic are under threat from the increasing pressure and demand placed on t...
Acknowledgments We thank colleagues at the University of Aberdeen, Moray First Marine, NERI, Hi-Def ...