H. N. Coulombe conducted a live-trapping study on an outbreak of feral house
mice in a salt marsh in mid-December 1962 at Ballana Creek, Los Angeles
County, California. A square 10 x 10 grid was used with 100 Sherman
traps spaced 3 m apart. Trapping was done twice daily, morning and
evening, for 5 days.
The dataset was described by Otis et al. (1978) and distributed with
their CAPTURE software (now available from
https://eesc.usgs.gov/mbr/software/capture.shtml). Otis et
al. (1978 p. 62, 68) cite Coulombe's unpublished 1965 master's thesis
from the University of California, Los Angeles, California.
The data are provided as a single-session capthist
object. There
are two individual covariates: sex (factor levels `f', `m') and age
class (factor levels `j', `sa', `a'). The sex of two animals is not
available (NA); it is necessary to drop these records for analyses
using `sex' unless missing values are specifically allowed, as in hcov
.
The datasets were originally in the CAPTURE `xy complete' format which
for each detection gives the `column' and `row' numbers of the trap
(e.g. ` 9 5' for a capture in the trap at position (x=9, y=5) on the
grid). Trap identifiers have been recoded as strings with no spaces by
inserting zeros (e.g. `0905' in this example).
Sherman traps are designed to capture one animal at a time, but the data
include 30 double captures and one occasion when there were 4
individuals in a trap at one time. The true detector type therefore
falls between `single' and `multi'. Detector type is set to `multi' in
the distributed data objects.
Otis et al. (1978) report various analyses including a closure test on
the full data, and model selection and density estimation on data from
the mornings only.