articleJournal of BiogeographyAug 6, 2009Closed access

Spatially autocorrelated sampling falsely inflates measures of accuracy for presence‐only niche models

University of California, Davis

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Abstract

Abstract Aim Environmental niche models that utilize presence‐only data have been increasingly employed to model species distributions and test ecological and evolutionary predictions. The ideal method for evaluating the accuracy of a niche model is to train a model with one dataset and then test model predictions against an independent dataset. However, a truly independent dataset is often not available, and instead random subsets of the total data are used for ‘training’ and ‘testing’ purposes. The goal of this study was to determine how spatially autocorrelated sampling affects measures of niche model accuracy when using subsets of a larger dataset for accuracy evaluation. Location The distribution of…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Autocorrelation
  • Spatial analysis
  • Sampling (signal processing)
  • Statistics
  • Environmental niche modelling
  • Niche
  • Statistic
  • Computer science
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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