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The influence of spatial scale on the congruence of classifications circumscribing morphological units of biodiversity
Authors:David A Nipperess  Alan N Andersen  Anthony J Pik  Roger Bramble  Peter Wilson  Andrew J Beattie
Institution:1. Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales, 2109, Australia,;2. Tropical Ecosystems Research Centre, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, PMB 44, Winnellie, Northern Territory 0822, Australia,;3. Department of Environment and Climate Change, 59‐61 Goulburn Street, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia,;4. SBYD Pty Ltd, Suite 5, 46 Urunga Parade, Miranda, New South Wales 2228, Australia
Abstract:Aim The ‘taxonomic impediment’ has led to a growing trend in ecology and conservation biology to use operational surrogates for species within the context of a particular research project. Because such ‘parataxonomic’ classifications are typically spatially limited in scope, we examined the influence of increasing spatial scale on the congruence of two such approaches with a more traditional taxonomic classification. Location Sturt National Park, north‐western New South Wales, Australia. Methods Specimens of two ant genera, Camponotus and Rhytidoponera, were classified by three independent methods. The ‘parataxonomic’ classification assigned specimens to morphospecies without specialist taxonomic expertise; the ‘taxonomic’ classification assigned specimens to either described species or, where this was not possible, to operational taxonomic units (OTUs) using specialist taxonomic expertise; the ‘phenetic’ classification assigned specimens to putative species using a K‐means partitioning algorithm on basic morphometric data. Specimens of each genus were pooled into ‘assemblages’, which were defined at multiple spatial scales using a nested sampling design. Congruence in the interspecimen relationships of the different classifications was tested for each assemblage using pair‐wise Mantel correlations. Results Classification congruence tended to decrease with increasing spatial scale. There were, however, clear differences between the genera. Parataxonomic–taxonomic congruence was consistently greater for Camponotus, while phenetic–taxonomic congruence showed the opposite pattern. Conclusions Observed patterns in classification congruence are attributed to two principal causes: (i) within‐species morphological variation, including ecotypic variation in Rhytidoponera and caste polymorphism in Camponotus; and (ii) a limit to the morphological similarity of potentially competing species at small spatial scales. Regardless of cause, the decline in agreement as the spatial scale of observation is increased has important implications for the measurement of biodiversity, particularly when comparing samples over regional, continental, and global scales.
Keywords:Classification congruence  limiting similarity  morphological variability  parataxonomy  spatial scale
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