A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

The tangled link between β- and γ-diversity: a Narcissus effect weakens statistical inferences in null model analyses of diversity patterns




AuthorsUlrich W, Baselga A, Kusumoto B, Shiono T, Tuomisto H, Kubota Y

PublisherWILEY-BLACKWELL

Publication year2017

JournalGlobal Ecology and Biogeography

Journal name in sourceGLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY

Journal acronymGLOBAL ECOL BIOGEOGR

Volume26

Issue1

First page 1

Last page5

Number of pages5

ISSN1466-822X

eISSN1466-8238

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/geb.12527


Abstract
Understanding the structure of and spatial variability in the species composition of ecological communities is at the heart of biogeography. In particular, there has been recent controversy about possible latitudinal trends in compositional heterogeneity across localities (beta-diversity). A gradient in the size of the regional species pool alone can be expected to impose a parallel gradient on beta-diversity, but whether beta-diversity also varies independently of the size of the species pool remains unclear. A recently suggested methodological approach to correct latitudinal beta-diversity gradients for the species pool effect is based on randomization null models that remove the effects of gradients in alpha- and gamma-diversity on beta-diversity. However, the randomization process imposes constraints on the variability of alpha-diversity, which in turn force gamma- and beta-diversity to become interdependent, such that any change in one is mirrored in the other. We argue that simple null model approaches are inadequate to discern whether correlations between alpha-, beta- and gamma-diversity reflect processes of ecological interest or merely differences in the size of the species pool among localities. We demonstrate that this kind of Narcissus effect may also apply to other metrics of spatial or phylogenetic species distribution. We highlight that Narcissus effects may lead to artificially high rejection rates for the focal pattern (Type II errors) and caution that these errors have not received sufficient attention in the ecological literature.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:04