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A quantitative review of abundance-based species distribution models

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-21, 01:03 authored by C Waldock, Richard Stuart-SmithRichard Stuart-Smith, C Albouy, WWL Cheung, Graham EdgarGraham Edgar, D Mouillot, J Tjiputra, L Pellissier

The contributions of species to ecosystem functions or services depend not only on their presence but also on their local abundance. Progress in predictive spatial modelling has largely focused on species occurrence rather than abundance. As such, limited guidance exists on the most reliable methods to explain and predict spatial variation in abundance. We analysed the performance of 68 abundance-based species distribution models fitted to 800 000 standardised abundance records for more than 800 terrestrial bird and reef fish species. We found a large amount of variation in the performance of abundance-based models. While many models performed poorly, a subset of models consistently reconstructed range-wide abundance patterns. The best predictions were obtained using random forests for frequently encountered and abundant species and for predictions within the same environmental domain as model calibration. Extending predictions of species abundance outside of the environmental conditions used in model training generated poor predictions. Thus, interpolation of abundances between observations can help improve understanding of spatial abundance patterns, but our results indicate extrapolated predictions of abundance under changing climate have a much greater uncertainty. Our synthesis provides a road map for modelling abundance patterns, a key property of species distributions that underpins theoretical and applied questions in ecology and conservation.

History

Publication title

Ecography

Volume

2022

Issue

1

Article number

e05694

Number

e05694

Pagination

1-18

ISSN

0906-7590

Department/School

Ecology and Biodiversity

Publisher

Blackwell Munksgaard

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

35 Norre Sogade, Po Box 2148, Copenhagen, Denmark, Dk-1016

Rights statement

Copyright (2021) The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported (CC BY 3.0) License, (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Socio-economic Objectives

180504 Marine biodiversity