The data are from independent surveys by eight observers of a population of 250 groups (760 individuals) of golf tees. The tees, of two colours, were placed in groups of between 1 and 8 in a survey region of 1680 m^2, either exposed above the surrounding grass, or at least partially hidden by it. They were surveyed by the 1999 statistics honours class at the University of St Andrews.
Format
Data is a list
with 4 elements each of which is a data.frame
:
book.tee.dataframe
object
object IDobserver
observer IDdetected
detected or not detecteddistance
perpendicular distancesize
group sizesex
number of tees in groupexposure
tee height above ground
book.tee.region
Region.Label
stratum nameArea
stratum size
book.tee.samples
Sample.Label
transect labelRegion.Label
stratum nameEffort
transect length
book.tee.obs
object
object IDRegion.Label
stratum in which it was detectedSample.Label
transect on which it was detected
Details
We treat each group of golf tees as a single animal with size equal to the number of tees in the group; yellow tees are male, green are female; tees exposed above the surrounding grass are classified as exposed, others as unexposed. We are grateful to Miguel Bernal for making these data available; they were collected by him as part of a masters project.
References
Borchers, D. L., S.T. Buckland, and W. Zucchini. 2002. Estimating Animal Abundance: Closed Populations. Statistics for Biology and Health. London: Springer-Verlag. https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-1-4471-3708-5
Buckland, S.T., D.R. Anderson, K.P. Burnham, J.L. Laake, D.L. Borchers, and L. Thomas. Advanced Distance Sampling: Estimating Abundance of Biological Populations. Oxford University Press. Oxford, 2004.