id ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:16663
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
op_collection_id ftslunivuppsala
language Swedish
English
topic Ecology
spellingShingle Ecology
Chase, Jonathan M.
Liebergesell, Mario
Sagouis, Alban
May, Felix
Blowes, Shane A.
Berg, Åke
Bernard, Enrico
Brosi, Berry J.
Cadotte, Marc W.
Cayuela, Luis
Chiarello, Adriano G.
Cosson, Jean-Francois
Cresswell, Will
Dami, Filibus Danjuma
Dauber, Jens
Dickman, Chris R.
Didham, Raphael K.
Edwards, David P.
Farneda, Fabio Z.
Gavish, Yoni
Goncalves-Souza, Thiago
Guadagnin, Demetrio Luis
Henry, Mickael
Lopez-Baucells, Adria
Kappes, Heike
Mac Nally, Ralph
Manu, Shiiwua
Martensen, Alexandre Camargo
McCollin, Duncan
Meyer, Christoph F. J.
Neckel-Oliveira, Selvino
Nogueira, Andre
Pons, Jean-Marc
Raheem, Dinarzarde C.
Ramos, Flavio Nunes
Rocha, Ricardo
Sam, Katerina
Slade, Eleanor
Stireman, John O.
Struebig, Matthew J.
Vasconcelos, Heraldo
Ziv, Yaron
FragSAD: A database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments
topic_facet Ecology
description 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 one-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.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Chase, Jonathan M.
Liebergesell, Mario
Sagouis, Alban
May, Felix
Blowes, Shane A.
Berg, Åke
Bernard, Enrico
Brosi, Berry J.
Cadotte, Marc W.
Cayuela, Luis
Chiarello, Adriano G.
Cosson, Jean-Francois
Cresswell, Will
Dami, Filibus Danjuma
Dauber, Jens
Dickman, Chris R.
Didham, Raphael K.
Edwards, David P.
Farneda, Fabio Z.
Gavish, Yoni
Goncalves-Souza, Thiago
Guadagnin, Demetrio Luis
Henry, Mickael
Lopez-Baucells, Adria
Kappes, Heike
Mac Nally, Ralph
Manu, Shiiwua
Martensen, Alexandre Camargo
McCollin, Duncan
Meyer, Christoph F. J.
Neckel-Oliveira, Selvino
Nogueira, Andre
Pons, Jean-Marc
Raheem, Dinarzarde C.
Ramos, Flavio Nunes
Rocha, Ricardo
Sam, Katerina
Slade, Eleanor
Stireman, John O.
Struebig, Matthew J.
Vasconcelos, Heraldo
Ziv, Yaron
author_facet Chase, Jonathan M.
Liebergesell, Mario
Sagouis, Alban
May, Felix
Blowes, Shane A.
Berg, Åke
Bernard, Enrico
Brosi, Berry J.
Cadotte, Marc W.
Cayuela, Luis
Chiarello, Adriano G.
Cosson, Jean-Francois
Cresswell, Will
Dami, Filibus Danjuma
Dauber, Jens
Dickman, Chris R.
Didham, Raphael K.
Edwards, David P.
Farneda, Fabio Z.
Gavish, Yoni
Goncalves-Souza, Thiago
Guadagnin, Demetrio Luis
Henry, Mickael
Lopez-Baucells, Adria
Kappes, Heike
Mac Nally, Ralph
Manu, Shiiwua
Martensen, Alexandre Camargo
McCollin, Duncan
Meyer, Christoph F. J.
Neckel-Oliveira, Selvino
Nogueira, Andre
Pons, Jean-Marc
Raheem, Dinarzarde C.
Ramos, Flavio Nunes
Rocha, Ricardo
Sam, Katerina
Slade, Eleanor
Stireman, John O.
Struebig, Matthew J.
Vasconcelos, Heraldo
Ziv, Yaron
author_sort Chase, Jonathan M.
title FragSAD: A database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments
title_short FragSAD: A database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments
title_full FragSAD: A database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments
title_fullStr FragSAD: A database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments
title_full_unstemmed FragSAD: A database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments
title_sort fragsad: a database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments
publishDate 2019
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16663/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16663/1/chase_et_al_200305.pdf
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16663/1/chase_et_al_200305.pdf
Chase, Jonathan M. and Liebergesell, Mario and Sagouis, Alban and May, Felix and Blowes, Shane A. and Berg, Åke and Bernard, Enrico and Brosi, Berry J. and Cadotte, Marc W. and Cayuela, Luis and Chiarello, Adriano G. and Cosson, Jean-Francois and Cresswell, Will and Dami, Filibus Danjuma and Dauber, Jens and Dickman, Chris R. and Didham, Raphael K. and Edwards, David P. and Farneda, Fabio Z. and Gavish, Yoni and Goncalves-Souza, Thiago and Guadagnin, Demetrio Luis and Henry, Mickael and Lopez-Baucells, Adria and Kappes, Heike and Mac Nally, Ralph and Manu, Shiiwua and Martensen, Alexandre Camargo and McCollin, Duncan and Meyer, Christoph F. J. and Neckel-Oliveira, Selvino and Nogueira, Andre and Pons, Jean-Marc and Raheem, Dinarzarde C. and Ramos, Flavio Nunes and Rocha, Ricardo and Sam, Katerina and Slade, Eleanor and Stireman, John O. and Struebig, Matthew J. and Vasconcelos, Heraldo and Ziv, Yaron (2019). FragSAD: A database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments. Ecology. 100 , 1 [Research article]
_version_ 1766270805862252544
spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:16663 2023-05-15T14:01:13+02:00 FragSAD: A database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments Chase, Jonathan M. Liebergesell, Mario Sagouis, Alban May, Felix Blowes, Shane A. Berg, Åke Bernard, Enrico Brosi, Berry J. Cadotte, Marc W. Cayuela, Luis Chiarello, Adriano G. Cosson, Jean-Francois Cresswell, Will Dami, Filibus Danjuma Dauber, Jens Dickman, Chris R. Didham, Raphael K. Edwards, David P. Farneda, Fabio Z. Gavish, Yoni Goncalves-Souza, Thiago Guadagnin, Demetrio Luis Henry, Mickael Lopez-Baucells, Adria Kappes, Heike Mac Nally, Ralph Manu, Shiiwua Martensen, Alexandre Camargo McCollin, Duncan Meyer, Christoph F. J. Neckel-Oliveira, Selvino Nogueira, Andre Pons, Jean-Marc Raheem, Dinarzarde C. Ramos, Flavio Nunes Rocha, Ricardo Sam, Katerina Slade, Eleanor Stireman, John O. Struebig, Matthew J. Vasconcelos, Heraldo Ziv, Yaron 2019 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16663/ https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16663/1/chase_et_al_200305.pdf sv eng swe eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16663/1/chase_et_al_200305.pdf Chase, Jonathan M. and Liebergesell, Mario and Sagouis, Alban and May, Felix and Blowes, Shane A. and Berg, Åke and Bernard, Enrico and Brosi, Berry J. and Cadotte, Marc W. and Cayuela, Luis and Chiarello, Adriano G. and Cosson, Jean-Francois and Cresswell, Will and Dami, Filibus Danjuma and Dauber, Jens and Dickman, Chris R. and Didham, Raphael K. and Edwards, David P. and Farneda, Fabio Z. and Gavish, Yoni and Goncalves-Souza, Thiago and Guadagnin, Demetrio Luis and Henry, Mickael and Lopez-Baucells, Adria and Kappes, Heike and Mac Nally, Ralph and Manu, Shiiwua and Martensen, Alexandre Camargo and McCollin, Duncan and Meyer, Christoph F. J. and Neckel-Oliveira, Selvino and Nogueira, Andre and Pons, Jean-Marc and Raheem, Dinarzarde C. and Ramos, Flavio Nunes and Rocha, Ricardo and Sam, Katerina and Slade, Eleanor and Stireman, John O. and Struebig, Matthew J. and Vasconcelos, Heraldo and Ziv, Yaron (2019). FragSAD: A database of diversity and species abundance distributions from habitat fragments. Ecology. 100 , 1 [Research article] Ecology Research article PeerReviewed info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2019 ftslunivuppsala 2022-01-09T19:15:01Z 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 one-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. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive