FinRisk check-in
Available at lcgodoy.me/slides/2025-frcheck/
2025-05-21
drmr
packageDRMs explicitly incorporate demographic processes that drive range dynamics (Pagel and Schurr 2012). They allow for linking environmental drivers directly to specific processes and have the potential for more robust forecasting under novel conditions.
drmr
goal: Bridge the gap between DRM potential and practical application.
Check out online.
Species | Model | RMSE | IS (80%) |
---|---|---|---|
Summer flounder | DRM | 9.49 | 7.83 |
SDM | 13.20 | 11.80 | |
Red-bellied woodpecker | DRM | 4.49 | 8.68 |
SDM | 6.86 | 6.20 |
Key Environmental Drivers: NEA Mackerel distribution is primarily driven by SST, prey availability, and stock size. Mackerel density peaks around \(8.5\) to \(12^\circ\) (Ono et al. 2024) with no ocurrences registered when temperature is below \(4.8^\circ\) (Olafsdottir et al. 2019)
Data Availability: Data available from various surveys (Egg Survey for spawning/SSB; Bottom Trawl for juveniles). No single survey offers complete coverage of all life stages or the entire distribution annually.
IESSNS: The International Ecosystem Summer Survey in the Nordic Seas (IESSNS) is likely the most appropriate for adult summer feeding distribution, providing annual, age-disaggregated abundance indices and tracking distribution.
Survey | Distribution | Start | Age structure |
---|---|---|---|
IESSNS | Summer feeding | 2010 | Age and size composition (Age 3+) |
BTS | Overwinter | 1965 | Age-0 abundance index |
Egg Survey | Spawning | 1992 | No age structure |
Preliminary results for FinRisk September meeting
Taylor the package code to the NEA species
Simulation based inference: Neural Bayes Estimators (Sainsbury-Dale et al. 2024)
Coordinate how (and what) the results would be more useful for the translational tools and the financial risk analyses —