4.4 Article

The use of MSR (Minimum Sample Richness) for sample assemblage comparisons

Journal

PALEOBIOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 4, Pages 696-709

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1666/09050.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Grant Scheme [ARC DP043262, LP0453664, LP0989969]
  2. XSTRATA Community
  3. University of New South Wales (UNSW)
  4. Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service
  5. Queensland Museum
  6. Mount Isa City Council
  7. Outback at Isa
  8. Riversleigh Society Inc.
  9. UNSW
  10. Waanyi people of northwestern Queensland

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Minimum Sample Richness (MSR) is defined as the smallest number of taxa that must be recorded in a sample to achieve a given level of inter-assemblage classification accuracy. MSR is calculated from known or estimated richness and taxonomic similarity. Here we test MSR for strengths and weaknesses by using 167 published mammalian local faunas from the Paleogene and early Neogene of the Quercy and Limagne area (Massif Central, southwestern France), and then apply MSR to 84 Oligo-Miocene faunas from Riversleigh, northwestern Queensland, Australia. In many cases, MSR is able to detect the assemblages in the data set that are potentially too incomplete to be used in a similarity-based comparative taxonomic analysis. The results show that the use of MSR significantly improves the quality of the clustering of fossil assemblages. We conclude that this method can screen sample assemblages that are not representative of their underlying original living communities. Ultimately, it can be used to identify which assemblages require further sampling before being included in a comparative analysis.

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