Testing the Utility of an Adaptive Cluster Sampling Method for Monitoring a Rare and Imperiled Darter

2011 
Abstract Adaptive cluster sampling (ACS) designs were tested against simple random sampling (SRS) designs to determine whether ACS designs were more suitable sampling protocols for monitoring rare fish species. To test the utility of these designs, baseline data on the tuxedo darter Etheostoma lemniscatum (a rare, federally endangered fish) were collected at three sites on the Big South Fork of the Cumberland River and used in computer simulation of ACS designs. Based on the simulation models, five ACS designs were chosen and tested at 13 potential monitoring sites. In terms of efficiency, ACS designs performed better than SRS designs, providing estimates with smaller standard errors. Adaptive cluster sampling design efficiency increased with effort; therefore, the two goals—minimizing effort and maximizing accuracy—are incompatible. Because it had less error, an inverse ACS design was recommended, although it required more sampling effort than other designs. Factors possibly affecting overall design perf...
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