Understanding the ecological niche to elucidate spatial strategies of the southernmost Tupinambis lizards

2013 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 551-565 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sofía Lanfri ◽  
Valeria Di Cola ◽  
Sergio Naretto ◽  
Margarita Chiaraviglio ◽  
Gabriela Cardozo

Understanding factors that shape ranges of species is central in evolutionary biology. Species distribution models have become important tools to test biogeographical, ecological and evolutionary hypotheses. Moreover, from an ecological and evolutionary perspective, these models help to elucidate the spatial strategies of species at a regional scale. We modelled species distributions of two phylogenetically, geographically and ecologically close Tupinambis species (Teiidae) that occupy the southernmost area of the genus distribution in South America. We hypothesized that similarities between these species might have induced spatial strategies at the species level, such as niche differentiation and divergence of distribution patterns at a regional scale. Using logistic regression and MaxEnt we obtained species distribution models that revealed interspecific differences in habitat requirements, such as environmental temperature, precipitation and altitude. Moreover, the models obtained suggest that although the ecological niches of Tupinambis merianae and T. rufescens are different, these species might co-occur in a large contact zone. We propose that niche plasticity could be the mechanism enabling their co-occurrence. Therefore, the approach used here allowed us to understand the spatial strategies of two Tupinambis lizards at a regional scale.

2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 3844-3858 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan M. Requena‐Mullor ◽  
Kaitlin C. Maguire ◽  
Douglas J. Shinneman ◽  
Timothy Trevor Caughlin

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boyan Angelov

ABSTRACTSpecies Distribution Models (SDMs) are used to generate maps of realised and potential ecological niches for a given species. As any other machine learning technique they can be seen as “black boxes”, due to a lack of interpretability. Advances in other areas of applied machine learning can be applied to remedy this problem. In this study we test a new tool relying on Local Interpretable Model-agnostic Explanations (LIME) by comparing its results of other known methods and ecological interpretations from domain experts. The findings confirm that LIME provides consistent and ecologically sound explanations of climate feature importance during the training of SDMs, and that the sdmexplain R package can be used with confidence.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 1495
Author(s):  
Jehyeok Rew ◽  
Yongjang Cho ◽  
Eenjun Hwang

Species distribution models have been used for various purposes, such as conserving species, discovering potential habitats, and obtaining evolutionary insights by predicting species occurrence. Many statistical and machine-learning-based approaches have been proposed to construct effective species distribution models, but with limited success due to spatial biases in presences and imbalanced presence-absences. We propose a novel species distribution model to address these problems based on bootstrap aggregating (bagging) ensembles of deep neural networks (DNNs). We first generate bootstraps considering presence-absence data on spatial balance to alleviate the bias problem. Then we construct DNNs using environmental data from presence and absence locations, and finally combine these into an ensemble model using three voting methods to improve prediction accuracy. Extensive experiments verified the proposed model’s effectiveness for species in South Korea using crowdsourced observations that have spatial biases. The proposed model achieved more accurate and robust prediction results than the current best practice models.


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