A Bayesian semiparametric GLMM for historical and newly collected presence-only data: An application to species richness of Ross Sea Mollusca

Historical data sets from vast and relatively inaccessible areas are sources of potentially unique information still valuable for biodiversity studies today. In many research fields, ranging from climate change to projection of species loss, great efforts have been made to integrate historical data...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmetrics
Main Authors: C. Carota, C. R. Nava, C. Ghiglione, S. Schiaparelli
Other Authors: Carota, C., Nava, C. R., Ghiglione, C., Schiaparelli, S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11567/897085
https://doi.org/10.1002/env.2462
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Summary:Historical data sets from vast and relatively inaccessible areas are sources of potentially unique information still valuable for biodiversity studies today. In many research fields, ranging from climate change to projection of species loss, great efforts have been made to integrate historical data sets with recent data to create databases that are as complete as possible. Unlocking the information contained in presence-only data, largely prevalent in such databases, presents a challenge for statistical modeling because of insidious observational errors due to the opportunistic nature of the data-gathering process. In this article, we propose an appropriate statistical method for the joint analysis of historical and newly collected presence-only data, that is, a Bayesian semiparametric generalized linear mixed model with Dirichlet process random effects. The potential of the method is illustrated by considering the Ross Sea section of the SOMBASE, an international compilation of Southern OceanMollusc distributional records, from 1899 to 2004 and beyond. Despite the presence of sampling bias and non detection errors, the proposedmodel draws latent information from the data, such that the resulting estimates of the parameters of interest not only are coherent with those obtained in indirectly related studies based on well-structured data but also suggest interesting ideas for further research.