4.6 Article

Effects of site-selection bias on estimates of biodiversity change

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 2, Pages 688-698

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13610

Keywords

alpha diversity; community dynamics; conceptual model; local trends; richness change; sampling bias; temporal trends

Funding

  1. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig - German Research Foundation [DFG FZT 118]
  2. HIFMB
  3. Ministry for Science and Culture of Lower Saxony
  4. Volkswagen Foundation through the Niedersachsisches Vorab grant program [ZN3285]
  5. Projekt DEAL

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The study found that site-selection biases have a significant impact on estimates of biodiversity, especially in predicting biodiversity loss. To minimize biases, systematic site-selection schemes, maximizing sampling area, and the use of biodiversity measures less sensitive to rare species are recommended.
Estimates of biodiversity change are essential for the management and conservation of ecosystems. Accurate estimates rely on selecting representative sites, but monitoring often focuses on sites of special interest. How such site-selection biases influence estimates of biodiversity change is largely unknown. Site-selection bias potentially occurs across four major sources of biodiversity data, decreasing in likelihood from citizen science, museums, national park monitoring, and academic research. We defined site-selection bias as a preference for sites that are either densely populated (i.e., abundance bias) or species rich (i.e., richness bias). We simulated biodiversity change in a virtual landscape and tracked the observed biodiversity at a sampled site. The site was selected either randomly or with a site-selection bias. We used a simple spatially resolved, individual-based model to predict the movement or dispersal of individuals in and out of the chosen sampling site. Site-selection bias exaggerated estimates of biodiversity loss in sites selected with a bias by on average 300-400% compared with randomly selected sites. Based on our simulations, site-selection bias resulted in positive trends being estimated as negative trends: richness increase was estimated as 0.1 in randomly selected sites, whereas sites selected with a bias showed a richness change of -0.1 to -0.2 on average. Thus, site-selection bias may falsely indicate decreases in biodiversity. We varied sampling design and characteristics of the species and found that site-selection biases were strongest in short time series, for small grains, organisms with low dispersal ability, large regional species pools, and strong spatial aggregation. Based on these findings, to minimize site-selection bias, we recommend use of systematic site-selection schemes; maximizing sampling area; calculating biodiversity measures cumulatively across plots; and use of biodiversity measures that are less sensitive to rare species, such as the effective number of species. Awareness of the potential impact of site-selection bias is needed for biodiversity monitoring, the design of new studies on biodiversity change, and the interpretation of existing data.

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