» Articles » PMID: 19449706

Sufficient Sampling for Asymptotic Minimum Species Richness Estimators

Overview
Journal Ecology
Date 2009 May 20
PMID 19449706
Citations 96
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Biodiversity sampling is labor intensive, and a substantial fraction of a biota is often represented by species of very low abundance, which typically remain undetected by biodiversity surveys. Statistical methods are widely used to estimate the asymptotic number of species present, including species not yet detected. Additional sampling is required to detect and identify these species, but richness estimators do not indicate how much sampling effort (additional individuals or samples) would be necessary to reach the asymptote of the species accumulation curve. Here we develop the first statistically rigorous nonparametric method for estimating the minimum number of additional individuals, samples, or sampling area required to detect any arbitrary proportion (including 100%) of the estimated asymptotic species richness. The method uses the Chao1 and Chao2 nonparametric estimators of asymptotic richness, which are based on the frequencies of rare species in the original sampling data. To evaluate the performance of the proposed method, we randomly subsampled individuals or quadrats from two large biodiversity inventories (light trap captures of Lepidoptera in Great Britain and censuses of woody plants on Barro Colorado Island [BCI], Panama). The simulation results suggest that the method performs well but is slightly conservative for small sample sizes. Analyses of the BCI results suggest that the method is robust to nonindependence arising from small-scale spatial aggregation of species occurrences. When the method was applied to seven published biodiversity data sets, the additional sampling effort necessary to capture all the estimated species ranged from 1.05 to 10.67 times the original sample (median approximately equal to 2.23). Substantially less effort is needed to detect 90% of the species (0.33-1.10 times the original effort; median approximately equal to 0.80). An Excel spreadsheet tool is provided for calculating necessary sampling effort for either abundance data or replicated incidence data.

Citing Articles

How many do we need? Meeting the challenges of studying the microbiome of a cryptic insect in an orchard.

Maurin A, Durand A, Guertin C, Constant P Front Microbiol. 2025; 15():1490681.

PMID: 39834370 PMC: 11743375. DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2024.1490681.


Biofilms inactivate the free-living stage of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, the most destructive pathogen for vertebrate diversity.

Sentenac H, Schmeller D, Caubet S, Carsin A, Guillet R, Ferriol J ISME J. 2024; 18(1).

PMID: 39325976 PMC: 11630259. DOI: 10.1093/ismejo/wrae189.


Mosquito dynamics and their drivers in peri-urban Antananarivo, Madagascar: insights from a longitudinal multi-host single-site survey.

Tantely M, Guis H, Raharinirina M, Ambinintsoa M, Randriananjantenaina I, Velonirina H Parasit Vectors. 2024; 17(1):383.

PMID: 39256778 PMC: 11385145. DOI: 10.1186/s13071-024-06393-4.


Accounting for imperfect detection when estimating species-area relationships and beta-diversity.

Noble C, Peres C, Gilroy J Ecol Evol. 2024; 14(7):e70017.

PMID: 38988344 PMC: 11236461. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.70017.


Diversity and functional traits of seed endophytes of Dysphania ambrosioides from heavy metal contaminated and non-contaminated areas.

Gong W, Li Q, Tu Y, Yang D, Lai Y, Tang W World J Microbiol Biotechnol. 2024; 40(6):191.

PMID: 38702442 DOI: 10.1007/s11274-024-04003-0.