Co‐occurrence is not evidence of ecological interactions
Université de Sherbrooke · University of Guelph
Abstract
There is a rich amount of information in co-occurrence (presence-absence) data that could be used to understand community assembly. This proposition first envisioned by Forbes (1907) and then Diamond (1975) prompted the development of numerous modelling approaches (e.g. null model analysis, co-occurrence networks and, more recently, joint species distribution models). Both theory and experimental evidence support the idea that ecological interactions may affect co-occurrence, but it remains unclear to what extent the signal of interaction can be captured in observational data. It is now time to step back from the statistical developments and critically assess whether co-occurrence data are really a proxy for…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 158.28
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 114
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Ecology
- Proxy (statistics)
- Null model
- Community
- Co-occurrence
- Ecological systems theory
- Spatial analysis
- Geography
- Life in Land