“…(3) Presence–absence data can remove much of the noise induced by sampling biases or errors, whereas large sampling errors can lead to unreliable abundance data (Hirst & Jackson, 2007; Jackson & Harvey, 1997). (4) In some cases, only presence–absence data can be recorded, for example, when organisms grow clonally, are too abundant to count, or are difficult for nonexperts to identify taxonomically (Beisner, Peres‐Neto, Lindström, Barnett, & Longhi, 2006; Colwell, Chang, & Chang, 2004). (5) Presence–absence data are more appropriate than are abundance data for clarifying the effects of host characteristics on parasite similarity (Locke, Mclaughlin, & Marcogliese, 2013; Poulin, 2010; Poulin & Krasnov, 2010; Seifertová, Vyskočilová, Morand, & Šimková, 2008).…”