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Dive into the research topics where Sarah J. Converse is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah J. Converse.


Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management | 2011

Adaptive Management of Bull Trout Populations in the Lemhi Basin

Andrew J. Tyre; James T. Peterson; Sarah J. Converse; Tiffany L. Bogich; Damien Miller; Max Post van der Burg; Carmen M. Thomas; Ralph Thompson; Jeri Wood; Donna Brewer; Michael C. Runge

Abstract The bull trout Salvelinus confluentus, a stream-living salmonid distributed in drainages of the northwestern United States, is listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act because of rangewide declines. One proposed recovery action is the reconnection of tributaries in the Lemhi Basin. Past water use policies in this core area disconnected headwater spawning sites from downstream habitat and have led to the loss of migratory life history forms. We developed an adaptive management framework to analyze which types of streams should be prioritized for reconnection under a proposed Habitat Conservation Plan. We developed a Stochastic Dynamic Program that identified optimal policies over time under four different assumptions about the nature of the migratory behavior and the effects of brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis on subpopulations of bull trout. In general, given the current state of the system and the uncertainties about the dynamics, the optimal policy would be to connect streams that...


Journal of Ornithology | 2012

Bayesian analysis of multi-state data with individual covariates for estimating genetic effects on demography

Sarah J. Converse; J. Andrew Royle; Richard P. Urbanek

Inbreeding depression is frequently a concern of managers interested in restoring endangered species. Decisions to reduce the potential for inbreeding depression by balancing genotypic contributions to reintroduced populations may exact a cost on long-term demographic performance of the population if those decisions result in reduced numbers of animals released and/or restriction of particularly successful genotypes (i.e., heritable traits of particular family lines). As part of an effort to restore a migratory flock of Whooping Cranes (Grus americana) to eastern North America using the offspring of captive breeders, we obtained a unique dataset which includes post-release mark–recapture data, as well as the pedigree of each released individual. We developed a Bayesian formulation of a multi-state model to analyze radio-telemetry, band-resight, and dead recovery data on reintroduced individuals, in order to track survival and breeding state transitions. We used studbook-based individual covariates to examine the comparative evidence for and degree of effects of inbreeding, genotype, and genotype quality on post-release survival of reintroduced individuals. We demonstrate implementation of the Bayesian multi-state model, which allows for the integration of imperfect detection, multiple data types, random effects, and individual- and time-dependent covariates. Our results provide only weak evidence for an effect of the quality of an individual’s genotype in captivity on post-release survival as well as for an effect of inbreeding on post-release survival. We plan to integrate our results into a decision-analytic modeling framework that can explicitly examine tradeoffs between the effects of inbreeding and the effects of genotype and demographic stochasticity on population establishment.


national conference on artificial intelligence | 2011

Dynamic resource allocation in conservation planning

Daniel Golovin; Andreas Krause; Beth Gardner; Sarah J. Converse; Steve Morey


Biological Conservation | 2010

Optimal control of native predators

Julien Martin; Allan F. O'Connell; William L. Kendall; Michael C. Runge; Theodore R. Simons; Arielle Waldstein; Shiloh A. Schulte; Sarah J. Converse; Graham W. Smith; Timothy Pinion; Michael Rikard; Elise F. Zipkin


Archive | 2012

Dealing with incomplete and variable detectability in multi-year, multi-site monitoring of ecological populations

Sarah J. Converse; J. Andrew Royle


arXiv: Methodology | 2012

Data Augmentation for Hierarchical Capture-recapture Models

J. Andrew Royle; Sarah J. Converse; William A. Link


Archive | 2011

Special Issue Article: Adaptive management for biodiversity conservation in an uncertain world Which uncertainty? Using expert elicitation and expected value of information to design an adaptive program

Michael C. Runge; Sarah J. Converse; James E. Lyons


Open-File Report | 2017

A projection of lesser prairie chicken ( Tympanuchus pallidicinctus ) populations range-wide

Jonathan W. Cummings; Sarah J. Converse; Clinton T. Moore; David R. Smith; Clay T. Nichols; Nathan L. Allan; Chris M. O'Meilia


Archive | 2011

An Overview of Structured Decision Making

Michael C. Runge; Jean Fitts Cochrane; Sarah J. Converse; Jennifer A. Szymanski; David R. Smith; James E. Lyons; Mitchell J. Eaton; Angela Matz; Paul Barrett; Mary J. Parkin


National Conservation and Training Center Structured Decision Making Workshop | 2011

Keeping Hawai’i’s forest birds one step ahead of avian diseases in a warming world: a focus on Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge. A case study from the National Conservation and Training Center Structured Decision Making Workshop

Eben H. Paxton; Jeff Burgett; Eve McDonald-Fadden; Ellen Bean; Carter T. Atkinson; Donna Ball; Colleen Cole; Lisa H. Crampton; Jim Kraus; Dennis A. LaPointe; Loyal Mehrhoff; Michael D. Samuel; Donna Brewer; Sarah J. Converse; Steve Morey

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Michael C. Runge

Patuxent Wildlife Research Center

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J. Andrew Royle

Patuxent Wildlife Research Center

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David R. Smith

United States Geological Survey

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James E. Lyons

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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Richard P. Urbanek

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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Steve Morey

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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Allan F. O'Connell

Patuxent Wildlife Research Center

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Andrew J. Tyre

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Arielle Waldstein

North Carolina State University

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Beth Gardner

University of Washington

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