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FragSAD : a database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments

Chase, JM; Liebergesell, M; Sagouis, A; May, F; Blowes, SA; Berg, A; Bernard, E; Brosi, BJ; Cadotte, MW; Cayuela, L; Chiarello, AG; Cosson, J; Cresswell, W; Dami, FD; Dauber, J; Dickman, CR; Didham, RK; Edwards, DP; Farneda, FZ; Gavish, Y; Gonçalves‐Souza, T; Guadagnin, DL; Henry, M; López‐Baucells, A; Kappes, H; MacNally, R; Manu, S; Martensen, AC; McCollin, D; Meyer, CFJ; Neckel‐Oliveira, S; Nogueira, A; Pons, J; Raheem, DC; Ramos, FN; Rocha, R; Sam, K; Salde, E; Stireman III, JO; Struebig, MJ; Vasconcelos, H; Ziv, Y

Authors

JM Chase

M Liebergesell

A Sagouis

F May

SA Blowes

A Berg

E Bernard

BJ Brosi

MW Cadotte

L Cayuela

AG Chiarello

J Cosson

W Cresswell

FD Dami

J Dauber

CR Dickman

RK Didham

DP Edwards

FZ Farneda

Y Gavish

T Gonçalves‐Souza

DL Guadagnin

M Henry

A López‐Baucells

H Kappes

R MacNally

S Manu

AC Martensen

D McCollin

S Neckel‐Oliveira

A Nogueira

J Pons

DC Raheem

FN Ramos

R Rocha

K Sam

E Salde

JO Stireman III

MJ Struebig

H Vasconcelos

Y Ziv



Abstract

Habitat destruction is the single greatest anthropogenic threat to biodiversity. Decades of research on this issue have led to the accumulation of hundreds of data sets comparing species assemblages in larger, intact, habitats to smaller, more fragmented, habitats. Despite this, little synthesis or consensus has been achieved, primarily because of non‐standardized sampling methodology and analyses of notoriously scale‐dependent response variables (i.e., species richness). To be able to compare and contrast the results of habitat fragmentation on species' assemblages, it is necessary to have the underlying data on species abundances and sampling intensity, so that standardization can be achieved. To accomplish this, we systematically searched the literature for studies where abundances of species in assemblages (of any taxa) were sampled from many habitat patches that varied in size. From these, we extracted data from several studies, and contacted authors of studies where appropriate data were collected but not published, giving us 117 studies that compared species assemblages among habitat fragments that varied in area. Less than half (41) of studies came from tropical forests of Central and South America, but there were many studies from temperate forests and grasslands from all continents except Antarctica. Fifty‐four of the studies were on invertebrates (mostly insects), but there were several studies on plants (15), birds (16), mammals (19), and reptiles and amphibians (13). We also collected qualitative information on the length of time since fragmentation. With data on total and relative abundances (and identities) of species, sampling effort, and affiliated meta‐data about the study sites, these data can be used to more definitively test hypotheses about the role of habitat fragmentation in altering patterns of biodiversity. There are no copyright restrictions. Please cite this data paper and the associated Dryad data set if the data are used in publications.

Citation

Chase, J., Liebergesell, M., Sagouis, A., May, F., Blowes, S., Berg, A., …Ziv, Y. (2019). FragSAD : a database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments. Ecology, 100(12), e02861. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2861

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 22, 2019
Online Publication Date Aug 5, 2019
Publication Date Dec 2, 2019
Deposit Date Aug 8, 2019
Publicly Available Date Aug 8, 2019
Journal Ecology
Print ISSN 0012-9658
Electronic ISSN 1939-9170
Publisher Ecological Society of America
Volume 100
Issue 12
Pages e02861
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2861
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2861
Related Public URLs https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/19399170

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