I examine feeding behavior of an insect for several hours. One behavior is phloem ingestion. It has been postulated that the first instance of phloem ingestion is on average shorter than the second, and that is shorter than the third, and so forth. I take these measurements for several insects in several treatments. Given that the hypothesis that the duration of subsequent events is longer than prior events is true, and given that I cannot guarantee that all insects have the same number of phloem ingestion events, are any statistical methods valid?

Of course the interpretation of the mean changes to being the expected value at the midpoint of the number of instances of phloem ingestion. This applies to each insect. Since I cannot guarantee that all insects have the same number of events, I am less clear on the definition once I average these values over all insects because insects with more instances of phloem ingestion will invariably have a greater mean.

At the simplest level I just want to determine if there is a significant difference between treatments.

I should confess that I could use the literature and show that it is common practice to run any nonparametric test on these data. I am not yet comfortable with this practice.

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