Modelling the species richness distribution of French dung beetles (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae) and delimiting the predictive capacity of different groups of explanatory variables
- 4 July 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Global Ecology and Biogeography
- Vol. 11 (4) , 265-277
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1466-822x.2002.00291.x
Abstract
Aim To predict French Scarabaeidae dung beetle species richness distribution, and to determine the possible underlying causal factors.Location The entire French territory has been studied by dividing it into 301 grid cells of 0.72 × 0.36 degrees.Method Species richness distribution was predicted using generalized linear models to relate the number of species with spatial, topographic and climate variables in grid squares previously identified as well sampled (n = 66). The predictive function includes the curvilinear relationship between variables, interaction terms and the significant third‐degree polynomial terms of latitude and longitude. The final model was validated by a jack‐knife procedure. The underlying causal factors were investigated by partial regression analysis, decomposing the variation in species richness among spatial, topographic and climate type variables.Results The final model accounts for 86.2% of total deviance, with a mean jack‐knife predictive error of 17.7%. The species richness map obtained highlights the Mediterranean as the region richest in species, and the less well‐explored south‐western region as also being species‐rich. The largest fraction of variability (38%) in the number of species is accounted for by the combined effect of the three groups of explanatory variables. The spatially structured climate component explains 21% of variation, while the pure climate and pure spatial components explain 14% and 11%, respectively. The effect of topography was negligible.Conclusions Delimiting the adequately inventoried areas and elaborating forecasting models using simple environmental variables can rapidly produce an estimate of the species richness distribution. Scarabaeidae species richness distribution seems to be mainly influenced by temperature. Minimum mean temperature is the most influential variable on a local scale, while maximum and mean temperature are the most important spatially structured variables. We suggest that species richness variation is mainly conditioned by the failure of many species to go beyond determined temperature range limits.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Targeting squares for survey: predicting species richness and incidence of species for a butterfly atlasGlobal Ecology and Biogeography, 1999
- Testing Causal Explanations in Organismal Biology: Causation, Correlation and Structural Equation ModellingOikos, 1999
- Vertebrate species richness at the mesoscale: relative roles of energy and heterogeneityGlobal Ecology and Biogeography, 1998
- Altitudinal Turnover and Species Richness Variation in European Montane Dung Beetle AssemblagesArctic and Alpine Research, 1997
- Statistical approaches to interpreting diversity patterns in the Norwegian mountain floraEcography, 1996
- Autocorrelation in Logistic Regression Modelling of Species' DistributionsGlobal Ecology and Biogeography Letters, 1994
- The Problem of Pattern and Scale in Ecology: The Robert H. MacArthur Award LectureEcology, 1992
- Phylogenetic trends in the Scarabaeoidea (Coleoptera)Journal of Natural History, 1990
- Modelling Wildlife Distributions Using a Geographic Information System: Kangaroos in Relation to ClimateJournal of Biogeography, 1990
- How to make biological surveys go further with generalised linear modelsBiological Conservation, 1989