Contact

Robert K. Colwell

Museum Curator Adjoint in Entomology


robertkcolwell [at] gmail.com


Museum of Natural History

University of Colorado

Boulder, CO 80309, USA




robertkcolwell [at] gmail.com


Museum of Natural History

University of Colorado

Boulder, CO 80309, USA



Models and estimators linking individual-based and sample-based rarefaction, extrapolation and comparison of assemblages


Journal article


R. K. Colwell, A. Chao, N. Gotelli, Shang-Yi Lin, C. Mao, R. Chazdon, J. Longino
2012

Semantic Scholar DOI
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Colwell, R. K., Chao, A., Gotelli, N., Lin, S.-Y., Mao, C., Chazdon, R., & Longino, J. (2012). Models and estimators linking individual-based and sample-based rarefaction, extrapolation and comparison of assemblages.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Colwell, R. K., A. Chao, N. Gotelli, Shang-Yi Lin, C. Mao, R. Chazdon, and J. Longino. “Models and Estimators Linking Individual-Based and Sample-Based Rarefaction, Extrapolation and Comparison of Assemblages” (2012).


MLA   Click to copy
Colwell, R. K., et al. Models and Estimators Linking Individual-Based and Sample-Based Rarefaction, Extrapolation and Comparison of Assemblages. 2012.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{r2012a,
  title = {Models and estimators linking individual-based and sample-based rarefaction, extrapolation and comparison of assemblages},
  year = {2012},
  author = {Colwell, R. K. and Chao, A. and Gotelli, N. and Lin, Shang-Yi and Mao, C. and Chazdon, R. and Longino, J.}
}

Abstract

Aims In ecology and conservation biology, the number of species counted in a biodiversity study is a key metric but is usually a biased underestimate of total species richness because many rare species are not detected. Moreover, comparing species richness among sites or samples is a statistical challenge because the observed number of species is sensitive to the number of individuals counted or the area sampled. For individual-based data, we treat a single, empirical sample of species abundances from an investigator-defined species assemblage or community as a reference point for two estimation objectives under two sampling models: estimating the expected number of species (and its unconditional variance) in a random sample of (i) a smaller number of individuals (multinomial model) or a smaller area sampled (Poisson model) and (ii) a larger number of individuals or a larger area sampled. For sample-based incidence (presence–absence) data, under a Bernoulli product model, we treat a single set of species incidence frequencies as the reference point to estimate richness for smaller and larger numbers of sampling units. Methods The first objective is a problem in interpolation that we address with classical rarefaction (multinomial model) and Coleman rarefaction (Poisson model) for individual-based data and with sample-based rarefaction (Bernoulli product model) for incidence frequencies. The second is a problem in extrapolation that we address with sampling-theoretic predictors for the number of species in a larger sample (multinomial model), a larger area (Poisson model) or a larger number of sampling units (Bernoulli product model), based on an estimate of asymptotic species richness. Although published methods exist for many of these objectives, we bring them together here with some new estimators under a unified statistical and notational framework. This novel integration of mathematically distinct approaches allowed us to link interpolated (rarefaction) curves and extrapolated curves to plot a unified species accumulation curve for empirical examples. We provide new, unconditional variance estimators for classical, individual-based rarefaction and for Coleman rarefaction, long missing from the toolkit of biodiversity measurement. We illustrate these methods with datasets for tropical beetles, tropical trees and tropical ants.


Share



Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in