Title: Princip hn
1Princip hnÃzdovitosti (nested subsets or
nestedness) druhového složenà výpocet a
ekologické interpretace
Michal Horsák Ústav botaniky a zoologie PrF MU
Brno
2Nested subset patterns of species composition
- Theory
- Calculations
- Applications
http//aics-research.com/nestedness/tempcalc.html
http//fm1.fieldmuseum.org/aa/staff_page.cgi?staff
pattersoid438
3 nestedness - theory
One of the main goals of community ecology is the
identification and explanation of non-random
patterns of species composition. One of the
patterns is the nestedness
- the nested subset hypothesis states that the
species comprising a depauperate insular biota
are a proper subset of those in richer biotas,
and that an archipelago of such biotas, ranked by
species richness, presents a nested series - a group of species assemblages is said to be
perfectly nested when each species is present in
all assemblages richer than the most depauperate
one in which that species occurs
4 nestedness - theory
Nested
Non-nested
A
C
B
5 nestedness - theory
Three conditions are necessary for development of
nestedness
- islands or sites must be ecologically comparable
- species inhabiting these sites must have shared
similar biogeographic histories - species must be hierarchically ordered in terms
of their niches
The first two points correspond to homogeneity
constrains. The third condition serves to
summarize factors that order the incidence of
species.
6 nestedness - theory
The nested pattern was first proposed by
Darlington (1957) Zoogeography, colonization of
islands only by species with high dispersal
capabilities. Patterson Atmar (1986) Nested
subsets and the structure of insular mammalian
faunas and archipelagos. Now nestedness has
proved to be a very common phenomenon - 219
papers since 1980, Web of Science mammals,
births, frogs, fish parasites, plants,
dragonflies /archipelago a geographically
coherent cluster of islands, also clusters of
insular habitats or non-insular sites/
7 nestedness - theory
Degree of nestedness vertebrates gtgt
invertebrates (especially aquatic), plants -
high diversity - deferent origin and
biogeographic histories - highly variable
environment - scale dependence Around 10
studies in freshwater systems - insects in
Sweden (e.g. Malmqvist et al. 1999) -
macroinvertebrates in fragmented Alpine streams
(Monaghan et al. 2005) - Bdelloidea,
Ostracoda, Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera,
Trichoptera, Dytiscidae, Culicidae, Simuliidae
8 nestedness - theory
- What becomes relevant is what mechanisms promote
nestedness in communities with different
phylogenetic and ecological attributes. - Several mechanisms were proposed
- selective extinction
- selective colonization
- historical effects
- speciation
- differential reproductive success
- habitat nestedness
- nested habitat quality
- human disturbances
- sampling artefact
9 nestedness - calculation
- Many different metrics of nestedness have put
forward in the last two decades (see Wright et
al. 1998). - Two of the most used procedures are
- departures method of Lomolino (1996)
- temperature method of Atmar Patterson (1993)
Sfenthourakis et al. (1999) concluded that the
later method is more suitable for evaluating the
level of nestedness.
10 nestedness - calculation
- The temperature method of Atmar Patterson
(1993) - their metric measure the heat of disorder
presence-absence matrix
11 nestedness - calculation
Calculation the temperature of binary matrix
involves three steps
- to compute an isocline of perfect order it is a
curve that, in a perfectly nested matrix of the
same size an fill, would separate cells denoting
the presence of a species at a site from cells
denoting its absence - to find the matrix using permuting rows and
columns in the way that maximizes its nestedness - to associate with each absence above the isocline
and with each presence below it a normalized
measure of distance to the isocline.
The temperature of the matrix is the sum of these
distances (normalized to range between 0 for a
perfectly nested matrix and 100 for a maximally
unnested matrix).
12 nestedness - calculation
- The temperature method of Atmar Patterson
(1993) - their metric measure the heat of disorder
presence-absence matrix
13 nestedness - calculation
Two forms of noise contribute to the matrixs
temperature
- the random variation of different stochastic
events - the coherent noise of specific idiosyncratic
biogeographic events - idiosyncratic species
- idiosyncratic sites
14 nestedness - applications
- The phenonenon, termed nested subsets has various
biogeographical, ecological, and coevolutionary
consequences, as well as important implications
for biological conservation. (B.D. Patterson) - What the metric offers
- a measures of the uncertainty in species
extinction order - a measures of relative populational stabilities
- a means of identifying minimally sustainable
population size - an estimate of the historical coherence of the
species - assemblages
- a revelation of mechanism promoting the
nestedness - a decision for an appropriate conservation
strategy
15 nestedness - applications
- How to reveal a mechanism promoting the
nestedness? - to correlate the ranking order of sites in the
final nested matrix with the order of sites after
re-arranging the sites along the analysed factor - a significant correlation suggests that a
community is packed in a predictive order owing
to the influence of a given factor (Patterson
Atmar 2000)
16 nestedness - applications
- Implications for biological conservation
- the SLOSS problem has been addressed in a large
number of studies (for details see Ovaskainen,
2002), but no coherent conclusion has yet
appeared - an important conclusion from previously published
studies is that the result depends on the level
of nestedness - if the biota is highly nested, "single large" is
found to be the better strategy. On the contrary,
if the biota is not nested the "several small"
strategy tends to maximize the number of species
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