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Journal ArticleDOI

Perceptions of species abundance, distribution, and diversity: Lessons from four decades of sampling on a government-managed reserve

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TLDR
It is suggested that perceptions of herpetofaunal species diversity are strongly dependent on level of effort and that land management decisions based on short-term data bases for some faunal groups could result in serious errors in environmental management.
Abstract
We examined data relative to species abundance, distribution, and diversity patterns of reptiles and amphibians to determine how perceptions change over time and with level of sampling effort. Location data were compiled on more than one million individual captures or observations of 98 species during a 44-year study period on the US Department of Energy's (DOE) Savannah River Site Natichal Environmental Research Park (SRS-NERP) in South Carolina. We suggest that perceptions of herpetofaunal species diversity are strongly dependent on level of effort and that land management decisions based on short-term data bases for some faunal groups could result in serious errors in environmental management. We provide evidence that acquiring information on biodiversity distribution patterns is compatible with multiyear spatially extensive research programs and also provide a perspective of what might be achieved if long-term, coordinated research efforts were instituted nationwide. To conduct biotic surveys on government- managed lands, we recommend revisions in the methods used by government agencies to acquire and report biodiversity data. We suggest that government and industry employees engaged in biodiversity survey efforts develop proficiency in field identification for one or more major taxonomic groups and be encouraged to measure the status of populations quantitatively with consistent and reliable methodologies. We also suggest that widespread academic cooperation in the dissemination of information on regional patterns of biodiversity could result by establishment of a peer-reviewed, scientifically rigorous journal concerned with status and trends of the biota of the United States.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Gap analysis: concepts, methods, and recent results

TL;DR: The National Gap Analysis Program (GAP) as mentioned in this paper has developed the technical and organizational capabilities necessary for the regular production and analysis of such information, and the GAP experience provides one model for achieving these new frameworks.
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Estimating site occupancy and species detection probability parameters for terrestrial salamanders

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors applied a new method to estimate proportion of area occupied using detection/nondetection data from a terrestrial salamander system in Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
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Paradox, presumption and pitfalls in conservation biology: The importance of habitat change for amphibians and reptiles.

TL;DR: A global scale review of the state of research regarding the consequences of structural habitat change for amphibians and reptiles reveals a number of serious deficiencies, and suggests that the study of habitat change is deserving of considerably more attention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Landscape Composition and Wetland Fragmentation on Frog and Toad Abundance and Species Richness in Iowa and Wisconsin, U.S.A.

TL;DR: This article examined landscape-level habitat relationships for frogs and toads by measuring associations between relative abundance and species richness based on survey data derived from anuran calls and features of land-cover maps for Iowa and Wisconsin.
Journal Article

Prescribed fire effects on herpetofauna: Review and management implications

TL;DR: Current available information concerning effects of prescribed burning on amphibians and reptiles is reviewed, considering both direct responses of herpetofauna to fire and indirect effects via changes in upland and aquatic habitats.
References
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Book

Ecology: The Experimental Analysis of Distribution and Abundance

TL;DR: This book discusses ecosystem dynamics under Changing Climates, which includes community dynamics at the community level, and factors that limit Distributions, which limit the amount of variation in population size.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Nonconcept of Species Diversity: A Critique and Alternative Parameters.

Stuart H. Hurlbert
- 01 Jul 1971 - 
TL;DR: It is suggested that species diversity has become a meaningless concept, that the term be abandoned, and that ecologists take a more critical approach to species-number relations and rely less on information theoretic and other analogies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Measurement of Species Diversity

TL;DR: The present contribution attempts to define in a precise, but still generalized, what is or should be meant by the many terms sur­ rounding the concept-cluster diversity.
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How much biodiversity does the United States have?

Wealso suggest that widespread academic cooperation in the dissemination ofinformation on regional patterns of biodiversity could result byestablishment of a peer-reviewed, scientifically rigorous journal concernedwith status and trends of the biota of the United States.