Impacts of abundance and habitat area weighting in allocating species trends to habitats
Robin J. Pakeman

TL;DR
This paper examines how different methods of allocating species abundance trends to habitats affect biodiversity metrics, showing that weighting methods significantly influence results.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel analysis of how weighting species abundance and habitat area affects habitat-level biodiversity trend assessments.
Findings
Weighting species by abundance and habitat area leads to more accurate habitat-level biodiversity trend detection.
Unweighted methods overemphasize widespread species, potentially leading to misleading conclusions about habitat health.
Complex weighting methods reveal more differences in habitat trends, especially for sparsely vegetated areas.
Abstract
The dynamics of species depend on the management of their habitats. However, in the absence of good habitat monitoring data for many types of species, reliance has been placed on identifying habitats seeing marked changes in biodiversity through combining trends in their associated species into a habitat level metric. Several data sources on species occupancy, abundance within different habitats, and habitat area for two example taxa, bryophytes and lichens, were linked to assess how different methods of allocating existing species’ abundance trends to habitats influenced the habitat statistics. In general, trends through time were similar, but the method of allocation had an impact on the absolute values of the Distribution Index that summarises weighted occupancy. Allowing generalists to contribute equally to specialist species in a habitat gave higher values of habitat level…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpecies Distribution and Climate Change · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Wildlife Ecology and Conservation
