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A new baseline for countrywide α-diversity and species distributions: illustration using >6000 plant species in Panama

Estimating α-diversity and species distributions provide baseline information to understand factors such as biodiversity loss and erosion of ecosystem services. Yet, species surveys typically cover a small portion of any country's landmass. Public, global databases could help, but contain biase...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ecological applications 2019-01, p.e01866
Main Authors: Leung, Brian, Hudgins, Emma J, Potapova, Anna, Ruiz-Jaen, Maria C
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Estimating α-diversity and species distributions provide baseline information to understand factors such as biodiversity loss and erosion of ecosystem services. Yet, species surveys typically cover a small portion of any country's landmass. Public, global databases could help, but contain biases. Thus, the magnitude of bias should be identified and ameliorated, the value of integration determined, and application to current policy issues illustrated. The ideal integrative approach should be powerful, flexible, efficient, and conceptually straightforward. We estimated distributions for >6000 species, integrating species sightings (S) from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), systematic survey data (S), and "bias-adjustment kernels" (BaK) using spatial and species trait databases (S BaK). We validated our approach using both locational and species holdout sets, and then applied our predictive model to Panama. Using sightings alone (the most common approach) discriminated relative probabilities of occurrences well (AUC=0.88), but underestimated actual probabilities by ~4000%, while using survey data alone omitted over 3/4 of the >6000 species. Comparatively, S BaK had no systematic underestimation, and substantially stronger discrimination (AUC=0.96) and predictive power (deviance explained=47%). Our model suggested high diversity (~200% countrywide mean) where urban development is projected to occur (the Panama Canal watershed), and also suggested this is not due to higher sampling intensity. However, portions of the Caribbean coast and eastern Panama (the Darién Gap) were even higher, both for total plant biodiversity (~250% countrywide mean), and CITES listed species. Finally, indigenous territories appeared half as diverse as other regions, based on survey observations. However, our model suggested this was largely due to site selection, and that richness in and out of indigenous territories was roughly equal. In brief, we provide arguably the best estimate of countrywide plant α-diversity and species distributions in the Neotropics, and make >6000 species distributions available. We identify regions of overlap between development and high biodiversity, and improves interpretation of biodiversity patterns, including for policy-relevant CITES species, and locations with limited access (i.e., indigenous territories). We derive a powerful, flexible, efficient and simple estimation approach for biodiversity science. This article is protected b
ISSN:1051-0761