Tradeoffs of different types of species occurrence data for use in systematic conservation planning
Top Cited Papers
- 12 September 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Ecology Letters
- Vol. 9 (10) , 1136-1145
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1461-0248.2006.00970.x
Abstract
Data on the occurrence of species are widely used to inform the design of reserve networks. These data contain commission errors (when a species is mistakenly thought to be present) and omission errors (when a species is mistakenly thought to be absent), and the rates of the two types of error are inversely related. Point locality data can minimize commission errors, but those obtained from museum collections are generally sparse, suffer from substantial spatial bias and contain large omission errors. Geographic ranges generate large commission errors because they assume homogenous species distributions. Predicted distribution data make explicit inferences on species occurrence and their commission and omission errors depend on model structure, on the omission of variables that determine species distribution and on data resolution. Omission errors lead to identifying networks of areas for conservation action that are smaller than required and centred on known species occurrences, thus affecting the comprehensiveness, representativeness and efficiency of selected areas. Commission errors lead to selecting areas not relevant to conservation, thus affecting the representativeness and adequacy of reserve networks. Conservation plans should include an estimation of commission and omission errors in underlying species data and explicitly use this information to influence conservation planning outcomes.Keywords
This publication has 79 references indexed in Scilit:
- Methods for reserve selection: Interior point searchBiological Conservation, 2005
- Reserve Selection Using Nonlinear Species Distribution ModelsThe American Naturalist, 2005
- New developments in museum-based informatics and applications in biodiversity analysisTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 2004
- Protected Areas and SpeciesConservation Biology, 2004
- Improving the Quality of Distribution Models for Conservation by Addressing Shortcomings in the Field Collection of Training DataConservation Biology, 2003
- Distribution patterns of biodiversity and the design of a representative reserve network in PortugalDiversity and Distributions, 1999
- Scale and conservation planning in the real worldProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1999
- Are New Zealand's Nothofagus species in equilibrium with their environment?Journal of Vegetation Science, 1998
- Survey research in conservation biologyEcography, 1996
- Density as a Misleading Indicator of Habitat QualityThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1983