Pitfall trap sampling bias depends on body mass, temperature, and trap number: insights from an individual-based model
Authored by Jan Engel, Lionel Hertzog, Julia Tiede, Cameron Wagg, Anne Ebeling, Heiko Briesen, Wolfgang W Weisser
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.1790
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The diversity and community composition of ground arthropods is
routinely analyzed by pitfall trap sampling, which is a cost- and
time-effective method to gather large numbers of replicates but also
known to generate data that are biased by species-specific differences
in locomotory activity. Previous studies have looked at factors that
influence the sampling bias. These studies, however, were limited to one
or few species and did rarely quantify how the species-specific sampling
bias shapes community-level diversity metrics. In this study, we
systematically quantify the species-specific and community-level
sampling bias with an allometric individual-based model that simulates
movement and pitfall sampling of 10 generic ground arthropod species
differing in body mass. We perform multiple simulation experiments
covering different scenarios of pitfall trap number, spatial trap
arrangement, temperature, and population density. We show that the
sampling bias decreased strongly with increasing body mass, temperature,
and pitfall trap number, while population density had no effect and trap
arrangement only had little effect. The average movement speed of a
species in the field integrates body mass and temperature effects and
could be used to derive reliable estimates of absolute species
abundance. We demonstrate how unbiased relative species abundance can be
derived using correction factors that need only information on species
body mass. We find that community-level diversity metrics are sensitive
to the particular community structure, namely the relation between body
mass and relative abundance across species. Generally, pitfall trap
sampling flattens the rank-abundance distribution and leads to
overestimations of ground arthropod Shannon diversity. We conclude that
the correction of the species-specific pitfall trap sampling bias is
necessary for the reliability of conclusions drawn from ground arthropod
field studies. We propose bias correction is a manageable task using
either body mass to derive unbiased relative abundance or the average
speed to derive reliable estimates of absolute abundance from pitfall
trap sampling.
Tags
Individual-based model
Diversity
Biodiversity
Density
Size
Correlated random-walk
Species composition
Winter-wheat
Allometric relationship
Correction factor
Ground-dwelling arthropod
Pitfall trap
Sampling bias
Virtual ecologist
Ground-dwelling arthropods
Beetles coleoptera
carabidae
Epigeal arthropods