Dear Jeff, Marc and all,
I would like to ask for some thoughts on the methodological approach for my current research. I am interested in landscape connectivity, and after some primary assessment of the connectivity network within the study area, I plan to validate it through different ways.
One of the approaches I am considering is the assessment of the demographic parameters of the populations, through multi-season occupancy modelling (stPGOcc()), with the aim of evaluating colonization and extinction dynamics in the biologically important areas, and testing if the connecting corridors influence these dynamics.
What I am currently unsure about is how reliable this approach is for validating connectivity, and what its main limitations might be. In particular, I am wondering whether multi-season occupancy models remain informative with only two sampling seasons (e.g. 2020 and 2025), or whether a higher number of consecutive seasons (≥3) is generally required to obtain robust estimates of colonization and extinction.
Related to this, I would also appreciate your opinion on the most appropriate spatial scale for this analysis: would it be preferable to model occupancy dynamics across the entire study area, or to restrict the analysis to predefined habitat nodes and evaluate dynamics among those?
Any feedbacks or suggestions would be very helpful.
Best regards,
Arianna Vicari