Sampling effort and species richness assessment: a case study on Brazilian spiders

被引:0
|
作者
Ubirajara Oliveira
Antonio D. Brescovit
Adalberto J. Santos
机构
[1] Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais – UFMG,Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas
[2] Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais – UFMG,Centro de Sensoriamento Remoto, Instituto de Geociências
[3] Instituto Butantan,Laboratório Especial de Coleções Zoológicas
来源
关键词
Biodiversity knowledge; Biogeography; Sampling bias; Tropical invertebrates;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The knowledge on the geographical distribution of species is essential for building biogeographical and macroecological hypotheses. However, information on this regard is not distributed uniformly in space and usually come from biased sampling. The aim of this study is to quantify the influence of spatial distribution of sampling effort on the assessment of spider species richness in Brazil. We used a database of spider distribution records in Brazil, based on the taxonomic and biodiversity survey literature. The results show that the Atlantic Forest was better sampled and had the highest spider species richness among the Brazilian biomes. The Amazon, though having large collecting gaps and high concentration of records around major cities and rivers, showed the second highest number of species. The Pampa had a large number of records, but these are concentrated near a major city in the transition zone with the Atlantic Forest. The Cerrado, Caatinga and Pantanal had shown to be poorly sampled and, consequently, were among the lesser known biomes regarding the spider fauna. A linear regression analysis showed that the spider species richness in Brazil is strongly correlated to the number of records. However, we have identified areas potentially richest in species, which strongly deviate from the predicted by our analyses. Our results show that it is possible to access the spatial variation in species richness, as long as the variation in sampling effort is taken into account.
引用
收藏
页码:1481 / 1493
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Species richness of a spider community (Araneae): Extrapolation from simulated increasing sampling effort
    Samu, F
    Lovel, GL
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY, 1995, 92 (04) : 633 - 638
  • [22] Measuring species richness on sandy beach transects: extrapolative estimators and their implications for sampling effort
    Schoeman, David S.
    Nel, Ronel
    Soares, Alexandre Goulart
    MARINE ECOLOGY-AN EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVE, 2008, 29 : 134 - 149
  • [23] A useful procedure for estimating the species richness of spiders
    Edwards, RL
    JOURNAL OF ARACHNOLOGY, 1997, 25 (01) : 99 - 105
  • [24] Predictive sampling effort and species-area relationship models for estimating richness in fragmented landscapes
    de la Sancha, Noe U.
    Boyle, Sarah A.
    PLOS ONE, 2019, 14 (12):
  • [25] SAMPLING SPIDERS AND CARABID BEETLES WITH PITFALL TRAPS - THE EFFECT OF INCREASED SAMPLING EFFORT
    NIEMELA, J
    HALME, E
    PAJUNEN, T
    HAILA, Y
    ANNALES ENTOMOLOGICI FENNICI, 1986, 52 (03): : 109 - 111
  • [26] Spiders in Iceland: distributions, species richness, and faunal changes
    Bengtson, Sven-Axel
    Hauge, Erling
    INSECT SYSTEMATICS & EVOLUTION, 2007, : 97 - 120
  • [27] Sampling methods affect observed response of bird species richness to vegetation structure in Brazilian savannas
    Rodrigues, Rodolpho C.
    Prado, Paulo I.
    CONDOR, 2018, 120 (02): : 402 - 413
  • [28] Sampling effort and fish species richness in small terra firme forest streams of central Amazonia, Brazil
    dos Anjos, Maeda Batista
    Zuanon, Jansen
    NEOTROPICAL ICHTHYOLOGY, 2007, 5 (01) : 45 - 52
  • [29] Is it sufficient? Assessment of two sampling methods for urban plant species richness investigations
    Zhao, Juanjuan
    Chen, Jing
    Chen, Chundi
    Lu, Shijun
    Song, Chenchen
    Liu, Shiyan
    Li, Jian
    Zhuang, Chunxiao
    URBAN FORESTRY & URBAN GREENING, 2023, 79
  • [30] Variation in the diversity and richness of parasitoid wasps based on sampling effort
    Saunders, Thomas E.
    Ward, Darren F.
    PEERJ, 2018, 6