Abstract

Diversity estimates play a key role in ecological assessments. Species richness and abundance are commonly used to generate complex diversity indices that are dependent on the quality of these estimates. As such, there is a long‐standing interest in the development of monitoring techniques, their ability to adequately assess species diversity, and the implications for generated indices. To determine the ability of substratum community assessment methods to capture species diversity, we evaluated four methods: photo quadrat, point intercept, random subsampling, and full quadrat assessments. Species density, abundance, richness, Shannon diversity, and Simpson diversity were then calculated for each method. We then conducted a method validation at a subset of locations to serve as an indication for how well each method captured the totality of the diversity present. Density, richness, Shannon diversity, and Simpson diversity estimates varied between methods, despite assessments occurring at the same locations, with photo quadrats detecting the lowest estimates and full quadrat assessments the highest. Abundance estimates were consistent among methods. Sample‐based rarefaction and extrapolation curves indicated that differences between Hill numbers (richness, Shannon diversity, and Simpson diversity) were significant in the majority of cases, and coverage‐based rarefaction and extrapolation curves confirmed that these dissimilarities were due to differences between the methods, not the sample completeness. Method validation highlighted the inability of the tested methods to capture the totality of the diversity present, while further supporting the notion of extrapolating abundances. Our results highlight the need for consistency across research methods, the advantages of utilizing multiple diversity indices, and potential concerns and considerations when comparing data from multiple sources.

Highlights

  • Quantifying species diversity is a fundamental pillar in ecology

  • To determine how commonly utilized substratum assessment methods capture species diversity (Hill numbers), we conducted a comparison of four methods: photo quadrats, point intercept, random subsampling, and full quadrat assessments of a smaller area (1/4 the size of the other methods)

  • We evaluated the species density, abundance, richness, Shannon diversity, and Simpson diversity detected by each method, as well as the time each method required in situ

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Quantifying species diversity is a fundamental pillar in ecology. Regardless of the ecosystem, diversity estimates play a vital role in environmental monitoring (Underwood, 1994), ecosystem comparisons, anthropogenic stressor evaluation (Lovejoy, 1994), and informing conservation efforts (e.g., May, 1988). Hill numbers have been extended to create an integrated approach to quantifying species diversity and abundance via sample-­ and coverage-­based rarefaction (Colwell et al, 2012; Chao & Jost, 2012; Chao et al, 2014). To determine how commonly utilized substratum assessment methods capture species diversity (Hill numbers), we conducted a comparison of four methods: photo quadrats, point intercept, random subsampling, and full quadrat assessments of a smaller area (1/4 the size of the other methods). The differences in species diversity and consistencies within species abundance estimates will result in similar differences within derived Shannon and Simpson diversity

| METHODS AND MATERIALS
| Method validation
| Method comparison
| DISCUSSION
Findings
| CONCLUSION
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
Full Text
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