The shape of occupancy distributions in plant communities: the importance of artefactual effects

Occupancy frequency distributions are commonly used as an approach to describe and analyse interspecific distribution patterns. However, the relative importance of biological versus artefactual mechanisms in shaping occupancy distributions is still largely undetermined. We evaluated the importance o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: P. M. Kammer, C. M. Vonlanthen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2009-03-01
Series:Web Ecology
Online Access:http://www.web-ecol.net/9/8/2009/we-9-8-2009.pdf
_version_ 1828783666988318720
author P. M. Kammer
C. M. Vonlanthen
author_facet P. M. Kammer
C. M. Vonlanthen
author_sort P. M. Kammer
collection DOAJ
description Occupancy frequency distributions are commonly used as an approach to describe and analyse interspecific distribution patterns. However, the relative importance of biological versus artefactual mechanisms in shaping occupancy distributions is still largely undetermined. We evaluated the importance of different and interacting artefactual effects on the shape of occupancy distributions in local plant communities. The effects of sampling protocol parameters (i.e. size and number of sample units, sample extent, coverage, and intensity) on the shape of the occupancy distributions were examined separately. We identified the mechanisms that cause the effects by tracking the shifts of individual species between occupancy classes with varying parameters. Furthermore, the impact of different species abundance distributions and increasing levels of intraspecific aggregation on occupancy distributions was investigated by means of artificial assemblages. We show the following results: 1) increases in the number of sample units, sample extent, coverage, and intensity all result in a unimodal occupancy distribution with the mode in the lowest occupancy class; 2) an increase in sample unit size leads to a bimodal distribution; 3) changes that occur in the shape of the occupancy distributions with varying sampling protocol parameters can be explained by the movements of the species between occupancy classes; 4) different species abundance distributions may cause occupancy distributions with a left-hand mode or a bimodal distribution; and 5) the number of species in the highest occupancy class decreases with increasing degree of aggregation. The mode that almost always occurs in the lowest occupancy class is most likely due to the high number of rare species existing in most communities; the mode in the highest class emerges as a pure artefact that occurs when the sample unit size is relatively large compared to the sample extent. Consequently, the exclusion or separation of concurrent artefactual mechanisms is crucial when investigating the biological causes for the shape of occupancy distributions.
first_indexed 2024-12-11T23:16:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f9cd525d269448658c8c20605322e5f0
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2193-3081
1399-1183
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-11T23:16:58Z
publishDate 2009-03-01
publisher Copernicus Publications
record_format Article
series Web Ecology
spelling doaj.art-f9cd525d269448658c8c20605322e5f02022-12-22T00:46:30ZengCopernicus PublicationsWeb Ecology2193-30811399-11832009-03-019182310.5194/we-9-8-2009The shape of occupancy distributions in plant communities: the importance of artefactual effectsP. M. KammerC. M. VonlanthenOccupancy frequency distributions are commonly used as an approach to describe and analyse interspecific distribution patterns. However, the relative importance of biological versus artefactual mechanisms in shaping occupancy distributions is still largely undetermined. We evaluated the importance of different and interacting artefactual effects on the shape of occupancy distributions in local plant communities. The effects of sampling protocol parameters (i.e. size and number of sample units, sample extent, coverage, and intensity) on the shape of the occupancy distributions were examined separately. We identified the mechanisms that cause the effects by tracking the shifts of individual species between occupancy classes with varying parameters. Furthermore, the impact of different species abundance distributions and increasing levels of intraspecific aggregation on occupancy distributions was investigated by means of artificial assemblages. We show the following results: 1) increases in the number of sample units, sample extent, coverage, and intensity all result in a unimodal occupancy distribution with the mode in the lowest occupancy class; 2) an increase in sample unit size leads to a bimodal distribution; 3) changes that occur in the shape of the occupancy distributions with varying sampling protocol parameters can be explained by the movements of the species between occupancy classes; 4) different species abundance distributions may cause occupancy distributions with a left-hand mode or a bimodal distribution; and 5) the number of species in the highest occupancy class decreases with increasing degree of aggregation. The mode that almost always occurs in the lowest occupancy class is most likely due to the high number of rare species existing in most communities; the mode in the highest class emerges as a pure artefact that occurs when the sample unit size is relatively large compared to the sample extent. Consequently, the exclusion or separation of concurrent artefactual mechanisms is crucial when investigating the biological causes for the shape of occupancy distributions.http://www.web-ecol.net/9/8/2009/we-9-8-2009.pdf
spellingShingle P. M. Kammer
C. M. Vonlanthen
The shape of occupancy distributions in plant communities: the importance of artefactual effects
Web Ecology
title The shape of occupancy distributions in plant communities: the importance of artefactual effects
title_full The shape of occupancy distributions in plant communities: the importance of artefactual effects
title_fullStr The shape of occupancy distributions in plant communities: the importance of artefactual effects
title_full_unstemmed The shape of occupancy distributions in plant communities: the importance of artefactual effects
title_short The shape of occupancy distributions in plant communities: the importance of artefactual effects
title_sort shape of occupancy distributions in plant communities the importance of artefactual effects
url http://www.web-ecol.net/9/8/2009/we-9-8-2009.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT pmkammer theshapeofoccupancydistributionsinplantcommunitiestheimportanceofartefactualeffects
AT cmvonlanthen theshapeofoccupancydistributionsinplantcommunitiestheimportanceofartefactualeffects
AT pmkammer shapeofoccupancydistributionsinplantcommunitiestheimportanceofartefactualeffects
AT cmvonlanthen shapeofoccupancydistributionsinplantcommunitiestheimportanceofartefactualeffects