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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Selecting thresholds of occurrence in the prediction of species distributions

TLDR
Twelve approaches to determining thresholds were compared using two species in Europe and artificial neural networks, and the modelling results were assessed using four indices: sensitivity, specificity, overall prediction success and Cohen's kappa statistic.
Abstract
Transforming the results of species distribution modelling from probabilities of or suitabilities for species occurrence to presences/absences needs a specific threshold. Even though there are many approaches to determining thresholds, there is no comparative study. In this paper, twelve approaches were compared using two species in Europe and artificial neural networks, and the modelling results were assessed using four indices: sensitivity, specificity, overall prediction success and Cohen's kappa statistic. The results show that prevalence approach, average predicted probability/suitability approach, and three sensitivity-specificity-combined approaches, including sensitivity-specificity sum maximization approach, sensitivity-specificity equality approach and the approach based on the shortest distance to the top-left corner (0,1) in ROC plot, are the good ones. The commonly used kappa maximization approach is not as good as the afore-mentioned ones, and the fixed threshold approach is the worst one. We also recommend using datasets with prevalence of 50% to build models if possible since most optimization criteria might be satisfied or nearly satisfied at the same time, and therefore it's easier to find optimal thresholds in this situation.

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Citations
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Where will conflicts between alien and rare species occur after climate and land-use change? : a test with a novel combined modelling approach

TL;DR: How species distribution models can be used to identify areas predicted as both suitable for rare native species and highly susceptible to invasion by alien species, at present and under future climate and land-use scenarios is described.
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The relative impacts of climate and land-use change on conterminous United States bird species from 2001 to 2075.

TL;DR: Maximum entropy modeling was used to construct species distribution maps for 50 North American bird species to determine relative contributions of climate and LULC for contemporary (2001) and future (2075) time periods, indicating species-specific response to climate andLULC variables.
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Assessing the effect of prevalence on the predictive performance of species distribution models using simulated data

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used simulated species data to examine how prevalence and the form of species environmental dependence affect the assessment of the predictive performance of models and found that the extent to which prevalence affects model performance depends on the modelling technique and its degree of success in capturing dominant environmental determinants.
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Pine invasions: climate predicts invasion success; something else predicts failure.

TL;DR: Testing whether climate-based models were able to predict both invasive and non-invasive introductions using 12 species of the genus Pinus found that climate similarities may be crucial to explaining why some introductions do not become invasions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Predictive habitat distribution models in ecology

TL;DR: A review of predictive habitat distribution modeling is presented, which shows that a wide array of models has been developed to cover aspects as diverse as biogeography, conservation biology, climate change research, and habitat or species management.
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Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) plots: a fundamental evaluation tool in clinical medicine.

TL;DR: Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) plots provide a pure index of accuracy by demonstrating the limits of a test's ability to discriminate between alternative states of health over the complete spectrum of operating conditions.
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A review of methods for the assessment of prediction errors in conservation presence/absence models

TL;DR: Thirteen recommendations are made to enable the objective selection of an error assessment technique for ecological presence/absence models and a new approach to estimating prediction error, which is based on the spatial characteristics of the errors, is proposed.
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Basic principles of ROC analysis

TL;DR: ROC analysis is shown to be related in a direct and natural way to cost/benefit analysis of diagnostic decision making and the concepts of "average diagnostic cost" and "average net benefit" are developed and used to identify the optimal compromise among various kinds of diagnostic error.
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Generalized linear and generalized additive models in studies of species distributions: setting the scene

TL;DR: A series of papers prepared within the framework of an international workshop entitled: Advances in GLMs /GAMs modeling: from species distribution to environmental management, held in Riederalp, Switzerland, 6 � /11 August 2001 are introduced.
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