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Bias in presence-only niche models related to sampling effort and species niches: Lessons for background point selection

The use of naturalist mobile applications have dramatically increased during last years, and provide huge amounts of accurately geolocated species presences records. Integrating this novel type of data in species distribution models (SDMs) raises specific methodological questions. Presence-only SDM...

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Autores principales: Botella, Christophe, Joly, Alexis, Monestiez, Pascal, Bonnet, Pierre, Munoz, François
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7239389/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32433677
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232078
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author Botella, Christophe
Joly, Alexis
Monestiez, Pascal
Bonnet, Pierre
Munoz, François
author_facet Botella, Christophe
Joly, Alexis
Monestiez, Pascal
Bonnet, Pierre
Munoz, François
author_sort Botella, Christophe
collection PubMed
description The use of naturalist mobile applications have dramatically increased during last years, and provide huge amounts of accurately geolocated species presences records. Integrating this novel type of data in species distribution models (SDMs) raises specific methodological questions. Presence-only SDM methods require background points, which should be consistent with sampling effort across the environmental space to avoid bias. A standard approach is to use uniformly distributed background points (UB). When multiple species are sampled, another approach is to use a set of occurrences from a Target-Group of species as background points (TGOB). We here investigate estimation biases when applying TGOB and UB to opportunistic naturalist occurrences. We modelled species occurrences and observation process as a thinned Poisson point process, and express asymptotic likelihoods of UB and TGOB as a divergence between environmental densities, in order to characterize biases in species niche estimation. To illustrate our results, we simulated species occurrences with different types of niche (specialist/generalist, typical/marginal), sampling effort and TG species density. We conclude that none of the methods are immune to estimation bias, although the pitfalls are different: For UB, the niche estimate fits tends towards the product of niche and sampling densities. TGOB is unaffected by heterogeneous sampling effort, and even unbiased if the cumulated density of the TG species is constant. If it is concentrated, the estimate deviates from the range of TG density. The user must select the group of species to ensure that they are jointly abundant over the broadest environmental sub-area.
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spelling pubmed-72393892020-06-03 Bias in presence-only niche models related to sampling effort and species niches: Lessons for background point selection Botella, Christophe Joly, Alexis Monestiez, Pascal Bonnet, Pierre Munoz, François PLoS One Research Article The use of naturalist mobile applications have dramatically increased during last years, and provide huge amounts of accurately geolocated species presences records. Integrating this novel type of data in species distribution models (SDMs) raises specific methodological questions. Presence-only SDM methods require background points, which should be consistent with sampling effort across the environmental space to avoid bias. A standard approach is to use uniformly distributed background points (UB). When multiple species are sampled, another approach is to use a set of occurrences from a Target-Group of species as background points (TGOB). We here investigate estimation biases when applying TGOB and UB to opportunistic naturalist occurrences. We modelled species occurrences and observation process as a thinned Poisson point process, and express asymptotic likelihoods of UB and TGOB as a divergence between environmental densities, in order to characterize biases in species niche estimation. To illustrate our results, we simulated species occurrences with different types of niche (specialist/generalist, typical/marginal), sampling effort and TG species density. We conclude that none of the methods are immune to estimation bias, although the pitfalls are different: For UB, the niche estimate fits tends towards the product of niche and sampling densities. TGOB is unaffected by heterogeneous sampling effort, and even unbiased if the cumulated density of the TG species is constant. If it is concentrated, the estimate deviates from the range of TG density. The user must select the group of species to ensure that they are jointly abundant over the broadest environmental sub-area. Public Library of Science 2020-05-20 /pmc/articles/PMC7239389/ /pubmed/32433677 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232078 Text en © 2020 Botella et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Botella, Christophe
Joly, Alexis
Monestiez, Pascal
Bonnet, Pierre
Munoz, François
Bias in presence-only niche models related to sampling effort and species niches: Lessons for background point selection
title Bias in presence-only niche models related to sampling effort and species niches: Lessons for background point selection
title_full Bias in presence-only niche models related to sampling effort and species niches: Lessons for background point selection
title_fullStr Bias in presence-only niche models related to sampling effort and species niches: Lessons for background point selection
title_full_unstemmed Bias in presence-only niche models related to sampling effort and species niches: Lessons for background point selection
title_short Bias in presence-only niche models related to sampling effort and species niches: Lessons for background point selection
title_sort bias in presence-only niche models related to sampling effort and species niches: lessons for background point selection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7239389/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32433677
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232078
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