Uniquity: a general metric for biotic uniqueness of sites

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Standard

Uniquity : a general metric for biotic uniqueness of sites. / Ejrnæs, Rasmus; Frøslev, Tobias Guldberg; Høye, Toke Thomas; Kjøller, Rasmus; Oddershede, Andrea; Brunbjerg, Ane Kirstine; Hansen, Anders Johannes; Bruun, Hans Henrik.

I: Biological Conservation, Bind 225, 2018, s. 98-105.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Ejrnæs, R, Frøslev, TG, Høye, TT, Kjøller, R, Oddershede, A, Brunbjerg, AK, Hansen, AJ & Bruun, HH 2018, 'Uniquity: a general metric for biotic uniqueness of sites', Biological Conservation, bind 225, s. 98-105. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2018.06.034

APA

Ejrnæs, R., Frøslev, T. G., Høye, T. T., Kjøller, R., Oddershede, A., Brunbjerg, A. K., Hansen, A. J., & Bruun, H. H. (2018). Uniquity: a general metric for biotic uniqueness of sites. Biological Conservation, 225, 98-105. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2018.06.034

Vancouver

Ejrnæs R, Frøslev TG, Høye TT, Kjøller R, Oddershede A, Brunbjerg AK o.a. Uniquity: a general metric for biotic uniqueness of sites. Biological Conservation. 2018;225:98-105. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2018.06.034

Author

Ejrnæs, Rasmus ; Frøslev, Tobias Guldberg ; Høye, Toke Thomas ; Kjøller, Rasmus ; Oddershede, Andrea ; Brunbjerg, Ane Kirstine ; Hansen, Anders Johannes ; Bruun, Hans Henrik. / Uniquity : a general metric for biotic uniqueness of sites. I: Biological Conservation. 2018 ; Bind 225. s. 98-105.

Bibtex

@article{974072081036431da68483421838718a,
title = "Uniquity: a general metric for biotic uniqueness of sites",
abstract = "1. Species richness is unrivalled as the most reported biodiversity metric in ecological and conservation research. Unfortunately, species richness ignores the scale-dependency of biodiversity.2. We propose the metric uniquity, a quantitative and spatially scalable measure of uniqueness of a site based on a species-by-site matrix and a site-by-habitat type classification with area weights for habitat types correcting for sampling biases.3. An example of uniquity is presented using vascular plant data from 130 sites representing a larger region (Denmark). We demonstrate the importance of the scale parameter of uniquity for the prediction of independent uniqueness indices calculated from species distribution data and the number of recorded red listed species.4. We compare the performance of uniquity with the performance of the indices Local Contribution to Beta Diversity (LCBD) and Range Rarity Richness (RRR), and we investigate its sensitivity to small sample size and poorly resolved habitat classification.5. We assess the performance of the uniquity metric applied to DNA metabarcoding data for plants, fungi and eukaryotes from the same set of study sites.6. Uniquity is a strong predictor of site uniqueness based on national distribution data and also correlates neatly with the observed number of red listed species. Uniquity based on DNA metabarcoding corresponds well with the number of red listed species observed.7. Perspective: Uniquity is generally applicable to biotas sampled with comparable effort, including field inventories, trap sampling, and DNA metabarcoding data. To our knowledge uniquity is the first index of uniqueness that explicitly considers spatial scale and sampling biases, while simultaneously accepting non-annotated DNA-data as input. Based on our study we offer general recommendations for further use and testing of uniquity as conservation value metric.",
keywords = "Biodiversity conservation, eDNA, Metabarcoding, Rarity, Red listed species, Vascular plants, Biodiversity, Conservation science",
author = "Rasmus Ejrn{\ae}s and Fr{\o}slev, {Tobias Guldberg} and H{\o}ye, {Toke Thomas} and Rasmus Kj{\o}ller and Andrea Oddershede and Brunbjerg, {Ane Kirstine} and Hansen, {Anders Johannes} and Bruun, {Hans Henrik}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1016/j.biocon.2018.06.034",
language = "English",
volume = "225",
pages = "98--105",
journal = "Biological Conservation",
issn = "0006-3207",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Uniquity

T2 - a general metric for biotic uniqueness of sites

AU - Ejrnæs, Rasmus

AU - Frøslev, Tobias Guldberg

AU - Høye, Toke Thomas

AU - Kjøller, Rasmus

AU - Oddershede, Andrea

AU - Brunbjerg, Ane Kirstine

AU - Hansen, Anders Johannes

AU - Bruun, Hans Henrik

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - 1. Species richness is unrivalled as the most reported biodiversity metric in ecological and conservation research. Unfortunately, species richness ignores the scale-dependency of biodiversity.2. We propose the metric uniquity, a quantitative and spatially scalable measure of uniqueness of a site based on a species-by-site matrix and a site-by-habitat type classification with area weights for habitat types correcting for sampling biases.3. An example of uniquity is presented using vascular plant data from 130 sites representing a larger region (Denmark). We demonstrate the importance of the scale parameter of uniquity for the prediction of independent uniqueness indices calculated from species distribution data and the number of recorded red listed species.4. We compare the performance of uniquity with the performance of the indices Local Contribution to Beta Diversity (LCBD) and Range Rarity Richness (RRR), and we investigate its sensitivity to small sample size and poorly resolved habitat classification.5. We assess the performance of the uniquity metric applied to DNA metabarcoding data for plants, fungi and eukaryotes from the same set of study sites.6. Uniquity is a strong predictor of site uniqueness based on national distribution data and also correlates neatly with the observed number of red listed species. Uniquity based on DNA metabarcoding corresponds well with the number of red listed species observed.7. Perspective: Uniquity is generally applicable to biotas sampled with comparable effort, including field inventories, trap sampling, and DNA metabarcoding data. To our knowledge uniquity is the first index of uniqueness that explicitly considers spatial scale and sampling biases, while simultaneously accepting non-annotated DNA-data as input. Based on our study we offer general recommendations for further use and testing of uniquity as conservation value metric.

AB - 1. Species richness is unrivalled as the most reported biodiversity metric in ecological and conservation research. Unfortunately, species richness ignores the scale-dependency of biodiversity.2. We propose the metric uniquity, a quantitative and spatially scalable measure of uniqueness of a site based on a species-by-site matrix and a site-by-habitat type classification with area weights for habitat types correcting for sampling biases.3. An example of uniquity is presented using vascular plant data from 130 sites representing a larger region (Denmark). We demonstrate the importance of the scale parameter of uniquity for the prediction of independent uniqueness indices calculated from species distribution data and the number of recorded red listed species.4. We compare the performance of uniquity with the performance of the indices Local Contribution to Beta Diversity (LCBD) and Range Rarity Richness (RRR), and we investigate its sensitivity to small sample size and poorly resolved habitat classification.5. We assess the performance of the uniquity metric applied to DNA metabarcoding data for plants, fungi and eukaryotes from the same set of study sites.6. Uniquity is a strong predictor of site uniqueness based on national distribution data and also correlates neatly with the observed number of red listed species. Uniquity based on DNA metabarcoding corresponds well with the number of red listed species observed.7. Perspective: Uniquity is generally applicable to biotas sampled with comparable effort, including field inventories, trap sampling, and DNA metabarcoding data. To our knowledge uniquity is the first index of uniqueness that explicitly considers spatial scale and sampling biases, while simultaneously accepting non-annotated DNA-data as input. Based on our study we offer general recommendations for further use and testing of uniquity as conservation value metric.

KW - Biodiversity conservation

KW - eDNA

KW - Metabarcoding

KW - Rarity

KW - Red listed species

KW - Vascular plants

KW - Biodiversity

KW - Conservation science

U2 - 10.1016/j.biocon.2018.06.034

DO - 10.1016/j.biocon.2018.06.034

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85049860798

VL - 225

SP - 98

EP - 105

JO - Biological Conservation

JF - Biological Conservation

SN - 0006-3207

ER -

ID: 200584028