Questions How does the spatial structure of plant communities vary with the spatial grain and with the measure of species presence used? How can communities most efficiently be sampled for spatial autocorrelation? Location Four communities – riverbed, bog, ultramafic shrubland/herbfield and forest – in southwest New Zealand. Methods Each site was sampled over an extent of ca. 120 m at seven spatial grains, from 0.0025 to 25 m2, using an innovative triangular sampling scheme. At the 1‐m2 grain, species abundances (local frequencies) were recorded, as well as presence/absence. Results The percentage variation in species composition explained by distance, i.e. by spatial autocorrelation, was higher at larger grain. However, it reached a maximum of only 15%. The nugget – the Y‐intercept of the dissimilarity/distance relation – has been seen as a measure of randomness in community composition. It was generally about 0.5 dissimilarity on a 0–1 scale, although values in the range 0.7–0.8 were found at smaller grain sizes in the forest. The 90% distance, i.e. the distance at which dissimilarity reaches 90% of its final value, was interpretable only for the two sites where spatial autocorrelation was strong, but gave realistic estimates. Unsurprisingly, some parameter estimates were unrealistic when the fits were poor. Abundance information added nothing to the ability of distance to predict dissimilarity. Conclusion The strength of spatial autocorrelation rose with increasing grain, to a low value but one congruent with the few comparable studies in the literature. That is, control of species composition seemed to be at the larger grain sizes sampled, rather than at a very fine scale. Strong spatial autocorrelation has been reported only over large extents, over environmental heterogeneity and/or when examining one guild within a community. The nugget was generally somewhat lower than other values in the literature, indicating less randomness. The lack of increased spatial community predictability when including species abundances conforms to the majority of previous studies, suggesting that the primary community control is on the presence of species, not their abundance. However, the differences in spatial autocorrelation between the four sites sampled emphasize that comparative studies using consistent methods are needed. The triangular sampling scheme used here was rapid, accurate, and efficient in its distribution of distances.
The decline of amphibians has been of international concern for more than two decades, and the global spread of introduced fauna is a major factor in this decline. Conservation management decisions to implement control of introduced fauna are often based on diet studies. One of the most common metrics to report in diet studies is Frequency of Occurrence (FO), but this can be difficult to interpret, as it does not include a temporal perspective. Here, we examine the potential for FO data derived from molecular diet analysis to inform invasive species management, using invasive ship rats ( Rattus rattus ) and endemic frogs ( Leiopelma spp.) in New Zealand as a case study. Only two endemic frog species persist on the mainland. One of these, Leiopelma archeyi , is Critically Endangered (IUCN 2017) and ranked as the world's most evolutionarily distinct and globally endangered amphibian (EDGE, 2018). Ship rat stomach contents were collected by kill‐trapping and subjected to three methods of diet analysis (one morphological and two DNA‐based). A new primer pair was developed targeting all anuran species that exhibits good coverage, high taxonomic resolution, and reasonable specificity. Incorporating a temporal parameter allowed us to calculate the minimum number of ingestion events per rat per night, providing a more intuitive metric than the more commonly reported FO. We are not aware of other DNA‐based diet studies that have incorporated a temporal parameter into FO data. The usefulness of such a metric will depend on the study system, in particular the feeding ecology of the predator. Ship rats are consuming both species of native frogs present on mainland New Zealand, and this study provides the first detections of remains of these species in mammalian stomach contents.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.