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Identifying Sighting Clusters of Endangered Taxa with Historical Records
Authors:KARL J DUFFY
Institution:1. School of Biological and Conservation Sciences, University of KwaZulu‐Natal, Private Bag X01, Scottsville, Pietermaritzburg 3209, South Africa, email duffyk@tcd.ie;2. Department of Botany, School of Natural Sciences, University of Dublin, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
Abstract:Abstract: The probability and time of extinction of taxa is often inferred from statistical analyses of historical records. Many of these analyses require the exclusion of multiple records within a unit of time (i.e., a month or a year). Nevertheless, spatially explicit, temporally aggregated data may be useful for identifying clusters of sightings (i.e., sighting clusters) in space and time. Identification of sighting clusters highlights changes in the historical recording of endangered taxa. I used two methods to identify sighting clusters in historical records: the Ederer–Myers–Mantel (EMM) test and the space–time permutation scan (STPS). I applied these methods to the spatially explicit sighting records of three species of orchids that are listed as endangered in the Republic of Ireland under the Wildlife Act (1976): Cephalanthera longifolia, Hammarbya paludosa, and Pseudorchis albida. Results with the EMM test were strongly affected by the choice of the time interval, and thus the number of temporal samples, used to examine the records. For example, sightings of P. albida clustered when the records were partitioned into 20‐year temporal samples, but not when they were partitioned into 22‐year temporal samples. Because the statistical power of EMM was low, it will not be useful when data are sparse. Nevertheless, the STPS identified regions that contained sighting clusters because it uses a flexible scanning window (defined by cylinders of varying size that move over the study area and evaluate the likelihood of clustering) to detect them, and it identified regions with high and regions with low rates of orchid sightings. The STPS analyses can be used to detect sighting clusters of endangered species that may be related to regions of extirpation and may assist in the categorization of threat status.
Keywords:Ederer–  Myers–  Mantel test  herbarium records  Ireland  museum records  orchids  regional declines  space–  time permutation scan  sighting clusters  barrido de permutaciones espacio‐tiempo  declinaciones regionales  grupos de avistamientos  Irlanda  prueba de Ederer‐Myers‐Mantel  registros de herbario  orquí  deas  registros de museo
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