The Implications of Experimental Design for Biodiversity Manipulations
I report a simulation study that tested the ability of a variety of experimental designs to achieve two fundamental goals: (1) to determine the association between loss of biological diversity and responses such as ecosystem functioning and (2) to determine which components of biodiversity, such as...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American naturalist 1999-01, Vol.153 (1), p.26-45 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | I report a simulation study that tested the ability of a variety of
experimental designs to achieve two fundamental goals: (1) to determine the
association between loss of biological diversity and responses such as
ecosystem functioning and (2) to determine which components of
biodiversity, such as number of species, functional diversity, or a
keystone species, were most responsible for that association. For the goal
of reliably detecting an overall association, all designs I tested
performed well and were unlikely to misidentify predominant patterns. Thus,
this study affirms the common conclusion of many published biodiversity
experiments that loss of biological diversity is often associated with a
reduction in ecosystem functioning. However, for the goal of
identifying the components of biodiversity that are most responsible for
the effects, designs differed markedly. Some designs performed well in
detecting number-of-species effects but poorly in detecting
effects of unique species or functional groups. No design tested was able
to discriminate both numeric effects and compositional effects in all
situations. Thus, this study demonstrates that interpreting results about
mechanisms from biodiversity experiments will be critically dependent on an
experiment's design. |
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ISSN: | 0003-0147 1537-5323 |
DOI: | 10.1086/303144 |