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Published March 12, 2019 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Effects of species traits and environmental predictors on performance and transferability of ecological niche models

  • 1. Departamento de Zooloxía, Xenética e Antropoloxía Física, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Santiago de Compostela, Spain. Research Center in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources (CIBIO/InBIO), Universidade do Porto, Vairão, Portugal.
  • 2. Universitè de Niza Sophia Antipolis, Nice, France
  • 3. Department of Botany and Inter- Universitary Institute for Earth System Research, University of Granada, Granada, Spain. Andalusian Center for the Assessment and Monitoring of Global Change (CAESCG), University of Almería, Almería, Spain
  • 4. Research Center in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources (CIBIO/InBIO), Universidade do Porto, Vairão, Portugal. 6Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal
  • 5. Departamento de Zooloxía, Xenética e Antropoloxía Física, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Santiago de Compostela, Spain

Description

The ability of ecological niche models (ENMs) to produce robust predictions for different time frames (i.e. temporal transferability) may be hindered by a lack of ecologically relevant predictors. Model performance may also be affected by species traits, which may reflect different responses to processes controlling species distribution. In this study, we tested four primary hypotheses involving the role of species traits and environmental predictors in ENM performance and transferability. We compared the predictive accuracy of ENMs based upon (1) climate, (2) land-use/cover (LULC) and (3) ecosystem functional attributes (EFAs), and (4) the combination of these factors for 27 bird species within and beyond the time frame of model calibration. The combination of these factors significantly increased both model performance and transferability, highlighting the need to integrate climate, LULC and EFAs to improve biodiversity projections. However, the overall model transferability was low (being only acceptable for less than 25% of species), even under a hierarchical modelling approach, which calls for great caution in the use of ENMs to predict bird distributions under global change scenarios. Our findings also indicate that positive effects of species traits on predictive accuracy within model calibration are not necessarily translated into higher temporal transferability.

[Note: this resource includes the output dataset]

Files

Effects of species traits and environmental predictors on performance and transferability of ecological niche models..pdf

Additional details

Funding

ECOPOTENTIAL – ECOPOTENTIAL: IMPROVING FUTURE ECOSYSTEM BENEFITS THROUGH EARTH OBSERVATIONS 641762
European Commission