Potential Global-Local Inconsistency in Species-Area Relationships Fitting

The Species-Area Relationship (SAR) has been widely employed to assess species diversity and predict species extinction. Thus far, although many functions were proposed to fit SAR based on field observations or simulation results, the shape of SAR curve has been debated extensively over decades. Her...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xubin Pan, Xiuling Zhang, Feng Wang, Shuifang Zhu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2016.01282/full
id doaj-4c2c51547cc145edbead9f3255551917
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4c2c51547cc145edbead9f32555519172020-11-24T23:24:05ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2016-08-01710.3389/fpls.2016.01282208982Potential Global-Local Inconsistency in Species-Area Relationships FittingXubin Pan0Xiuling Zhang1Feng Wang2Shuifang Zhu3Chinese Academy of Inspection and QuarantineTsinghua UniversityChinese Academy of ForestryChinese Academy of Inspection and QuarantineThe Species-Area Relationship (SAR) has been widely employed to assess species diversity and predict species extinction. Thus far, although many functions were proposed to fit SAR based on field observations or simulation results, the shape of SAR curve has been debated extensively over decades. Here we uncover a potential global-local inconsistency in SARs fitting simulation blocked by the limitation of large area sampling before. The results indicated that power and logarithm SAR formulas were good for the fitting if the sampling area range is small which is also the practical sampling interval in the field. However, for the logarithm SAR fitting, a sigmoid curve occurred in the log10 Area - Number of Species plane, and for the power SAR fitting, the curve is convex instead of a straight line as assumed when linear regression was applied. In conclusion, neither the power SAR nor the logarithm SAR fitted to simulated data is linear at large sampling range as commonly assumed in previous studies, no matter the distribution of species abundance is log-normal or negative-binomial, which unmasks the global-local inconsistency in Species-Area Relationships fitting. Thus misestimates of total number of species or other derivation parameters can occur if the fitted relationship is extrapolated beyond the range of the small and intermediate sampling size.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2016.01282/fullLog-normal distributionextrapolationnegative-binomial distributionSpecies-abundance distributionpower SARlogarithm SAR
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xubin Pan
Xiuling Zhang
Feng Wang
Shuifang Zhu
spellingShingle Xubin Pan
Xiuling Zhang
Feng Wang
Shuifang Zhu
Potential Global-Local Inconsistency in Species-Area Relationships Fitting
Frontiers in Plant Science
Log-normal distribution
extrapolation
negative-binomial distribution
Species-abundance distribution
power SAR
logarithm SAR
author_facet Xubin Pan
Xiuling Zhang
Feng Wang
Shuifang Zhu
author_sort Xubin Pan
title Potential Global-Local Inconsistency in Species-Area Relationships Fitting
title_short Potential Global-Local Inconsistency in Species-Area Relationships Fitting
title_full Potential Global-Local Inconsistency in Species-Area Relationships Fitting
title_fullStr Potential Global-Local Inconsistency in Species-Area Relationships Fitting
title_full_unstemmed Potential Global-Local Inconsistency in Species-Area Relationships Fitting
title_sort potential global-local inconsistency in species-area relationships fitting
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2016-08-01
description The Species-Area Relationship (SAR) has been widely employed to assess species diversity and predict species extinction. Thus far, although many functions were proposed to fit SAR based on field observations or simulation results, the shape of SAR curve has been debated extensively over decades. Here we uncover a potential global-local inconsistency in SARs fitting simulation blocked by the limitation of large area sampling before. The results indicated that power and logarithm SAR formulas were good for the fitting if the sampling area range is small which is also the practical sampling interval in the field. However, for the logarithm SAR fitting, a sigmoid curve occurred in the log10 Area - Number of Species plane, and for the power SAR fitting, the curve is convex instead of a straight line as assumed when linear regression was applied. In conclusion, neither the power SAR nor the logarithm SAR fitted to simulated data is linear at large sampling range as commonly assumed in previous studies, no matter the distribution of species abundance is log-normal or negative-binomial, which unmasks the global-local inconsistency in Species-Area Relationships fitting. Thus misestimates of total number of species or other derivation parameters can occur if the fitted relationship is extrapolated beyond the range of the small and intermediate sampling size.
topic Log-normal distribution
extrapolation
negative-binomial distribution
Species-abundance distribution
power SAR
logarithm SAR
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2016.01282/full
work_keys_str_mv AT xubinpan potentialgloballocalinconsistencyinspeciesarearelationshipsfitting
AT xiulingzhang potentialgloballocalinconsistencyinspeciesarearelationshipsfitting
AT fengwang potentialgloballocalinconsistencyinspeciesarearelationshipsfitting
AT shuifangzhu potentialgloballocalinconsistencyinspeciesarearelationshipsfitting
_version_ 1725561969737465856