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Biodiversity surrogacy: indicator taxa as predictors of total species richness in Brazilian Atlantic forest and Caatinga
Authors:Inara R. Leal  Ana Gabriela D. Bieber  Marcelo Tabarelli  Alan N. Andersen
Affiliation:1.Departamento de Botanica,Universidade Federal de Pernambuco,Recife,Brazil;2.Programa de Pós-Gradua??o em Biologia Vegetal, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco,Recife,Brazil;3.Programa de Pós-Gradua??o em Ecologia, Instituto de Biologia, Universidade Estadual de Campinas,Campinas,Brazil;4.CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems, Tropical Ecosystems Research Centre,Winnellie,Australia
Abstract:The use of indicator taxa as biodiversity surrogates has received widespread attention in conservation planning, but remains a highly contentious issue. Here we assess biodiversity surrogacy in the two most important biomes of tropical northeastern Brazil, Atlantic forest and Caatinga. We examine the extent to which species richness is correlated among taxonomic groups, and assess relationships between the richness of individual groups, and combinations of groups and total species richness. We introduce a new approach to dealing with autocorrelation between focal taxon richness and total species richness, using standardized data such that each taxon is given equal weight. Our Atlantic forest data covered seven taxa (bryophytes, pteridophytes, trees, ants, euglosine bees, birds, and mammals; total of 768 species) sampled from 12 sites; in Caatinga it was four taxa (trees, spiders, beetles and ants; total of 184 species) from 25 sites. Our results showed that: (1) in nearly all cases the species richnesses of individual taxa were significantly correlated with each other; (2) the species richnesses of most individual taxa were significantly correlated with total species richness in both biomes; (3) only two taxa were required for excellent (R 2 > 80%) surrogacy of total species richness in both biomes; and (4) the same two taxa (trees and ants) can provide reasonable (R 2 > 60%) surrogacy for total richness in these contrasting biomes. Our findings therefore suggest that the ‘shopping basket of taxa’ required for effective biodiversity surrogacy may not only need to be very small (two taxa), but may also be very limited in composition.
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