Abstract

Summary Wildlife studies to determine preferred habitat often involve sampling used sites and making comparisons with unused background sites. We apply these data to a somewhat different purpose, which is to assess the spatial distribution of important habitat variables relative to spotted owl nest sites. It is necessary to compare habitat characteristics of used and unused sites to understand habitat preferences. However, ecological literature provides little guidance for selection of appropriate background sites necessary for such an analysis. We apply propensity score matching to telemetry gathered samples of spotted owl habitat for the purpose of weighting the selected background sites. This helps to ensure that important covariates have similar distributions in the used and unused habitat samples. We propose a two-stage process where propensity score matching of used and unused sites results in weights that are applied in the second stage modelling process. The objective is to quantify how wildlife responses to important variables change with distance from a nest, den site or other central location. The expectation is that this will strengthen guidance to managers who wish to protect or to improve wildlife habitat on their forest land. Example applications using spotted owl telemetry data demonstrate how to apply the methods and show the potential to elucidate habitat characteristics.

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