The perils of measuring biodiversity responses to habitat change using mixed metrics
Date
2023
Authors
Liu, Mingxin
Miao, Xinran
Hua, Fangyuan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley Interscience
Abstract
Existing quantitative syntheses on how biodiversity responds to anthropogenichabitat change appear to sometimes mix different biodiversity metrics in drawing inferences. This “mixing metrics” practice, if prevalent, would considerably bias our understanding of biodiversity responses and render uninterpretable conclusions. However, the prevalence of this practice remains unknown, and the bias it potentially renders has not been empirically assessed. We fill this gap by conducting a systematic literature assessment of existing syntheses on bio-diversity responses to habitat change, along with an analysis of a global database specifically on forest restoration. We found that the “mixing metrics” practice was used in almost a quarter of existing syntheses across a wide range of ecosystem and habitat change types. This practice predictably altered the quantitative,and frequently even the qualitative, inferences on biodiversity responses to forestrestoration, in ways contingent on the composition of metrics mixed. We call on future syntheses to be cognizant of the difference in metric meaning and behaviors, and to avoid mixing different metrics in studying biodiversity responses to habitat change
Description
Keywords
biodiversity metrics, conservation intervention, forest restoration, geometric mean, speciesabundance, terrestrial ecosystems, quantitative synthesis
Citation
Collections
Source
Conservation Letters
Type
Journal article
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons Attribution License