Thesis abstract. Applying species distribution modeling for the conservation of Iberian protected invertebrates


Autoria(s): Chefaoui, Rosa
Data(s)

14/07/2014

14/07/2014

2011

14/07/2014

Resumo

This article outlines the approaches to modeling the distribution of threatened invertebrates using data from atlases, museums and databases. Species Distribution Models (SDMs) are useful for estimating species’ ranges, identifying suitable habitats, and identifying the primary factors affecting species’ distributions. The study tackles the strategies used to obtain SDMs without reliable absence data while exploring their applications for conservation. I examine the conservation status of Copris species and Graellsia isabelae by delimiting their populations and exploring the effectiveness of protected areas. I show that the method of pseudo‐absence selection strongly determines the model obtained, generating different model predictions along the gradient between potential and realized distributions. After assessing the effects of species’ traits and data characteristics on accuracy, I found that species are modeled more accurately when sample sizes are larger, no matter the technique used.

Identificador

Chefaoui, Rosa María. Thesis abstract. Applying species distribution modeling for the conservation of Iberian protected invertebrates, frontiers of biogeography, 3, 3, 101-105, 2011.

1948‐6596

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/4767

Idioma(s)

por

Publicador

International Biogeography Society

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Environmental niche modeling #Iberian Peninsula #invertebrates #predictive accuracy #species distribution models
Tipo

article