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Sampling efforts for determining fish species richness in megadiverse tropical regions

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Sampling efforts for determining fish species richness in megadiverse tropical regions. / Pompeu, Paulo Santos; De Carvalho, D. R.; Leal, Cecília Gontijo et al.
In: Environmental Biology of Fishes, Vol. 104, 30.11.2021, p. 1487-1499.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Pompeu, PS, De Carvalho, DR, Leal, CG, Leitão, RP, Alves, CB, Fagundes, D, Castro, MAD, Junqueira, N & ROBERT, MHUGHES 2021, 'Sampling efforts for determining fish species richness in megadiverse tropical regions', Environmental Biology of Fishes, vol. 104, pp. 1487-1499. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-021-01184-7

APA

Pompeu, P. S., De Carvalho, D. R., Leal, C. G., Leitão, R. P., Alves, C. B., Fagundes, D., Castro, M. A. D., Junqueira, N., & ROBERT, M. HUGHES. (2021). Sampling efforts for determining fish species richness in megadiverse tropical regions. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 104, 1487-1499. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-021-01184-7

Vancouver

Pompeu PS, De Carvalho DR, Leal CG, Leitão RP, Alves CB, Fagundes D et al. Sampling efforts for determining fish species richness in megadiverse tropical regions. Environmental Biology of Fishes. 2021 Nov 30;104:1487-1499. Epub 2021 Oct 28. doi: 10.1007/s10641-021-01184-7

Author

Pompeu, Paulo Santos ; De Carvalho, D. R. ; Leal, Cecília Gontijo et al. / Sampling efforts for determining fish species richness in megadiverse tropical regions. In: Environmental Biology of Fishes. 2021 ; Vol. 104. pp. 1487-1499.

Bibtex

@article{59d78287fbc144818996ac1aebd7f014,
title = "Sampling efforts for determining fish species richness in megadiverse tropical regions",
abstract = "Fish species richness is one of the most common descriptors of aquatic biodiversity and an important indicator of the ecological condition of stream reaches and regional biological diversity. However, inadequate sampling effort underestimates the true number of species and, consequently, might provide erroneous information about the ecological conditions of, and trends in, aquatic environments. We sampled 24 to 39 stream reaches (each 150 m long) in seven megadiverse hydrologic units in the Brazilian states of Par{\'a} (Amazonia biome) and Minas Gerais (Cerrado biome) to estimate the sampling effort needed to reach asymptotes at hydrologic unit spatial extents. We also estimated how much of the local richness would have been captured if the sampled reach was 50 or 100-m-long. Our results indicate that up to 53 reaches must be sampled per hydrologic unit for attaining an estimated 90% of the fish species richness, depending on the relative number of rare species. In most units, 100-m-long reaches suffice for collecting about 90% of the local sampled richness. We conclude that the effort frequently used in neotropical streams is adequate to capture most of the local fish fauna. However, complete inventories of hydrographic regions would only be feasible with efforts and resources far greater than those commonly employed. Before sampling programs are implemented for estimating true species richness, adequate levels of sampling effort should be assessed wherever that richness is expected to be high.",
author = "Pompeu, {Paulo Santos} and {De Carvalho}, {D. R.} and Leal, {Cec{\'i}lia Gontijo} and Leit{\~a}o, {Rafael Pereira} and Alves, {Carlos Bernardo} and Daniela Fagundes and Castro, {M{\'i}riam Aparecida de} and Nara Junqueira and ROBERT, {M. HUGHES}",
year = "2021",
month = nov,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1007/s10641-021-01184-7",
language = "English",
volume = "104",
pages = "1487--1499",
journal = "Environmental Biology of Fishes",
issn = "0378-1909",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sampling efforts for determining fish species richness in megadiverse tropical regions

AU - Pompeu, Paulo Santos

AU - De Carvalho, D. R.

AU - Leal, Cecília Gontijo

AU - Leitão, Rafael Pereira

AU - Alves, Carlos Bernardo

AU - Fagundes, Daniela

AU - Castro, Míriam Aparecida de

AU - Junqueira, Nara

AU - ROBERT, M. HUGHES

PY - 2021/11/30

Y1 - 2021/11/30

N2 - Fish species richness is one of the most common descriptors of aquatic biodiversity and an important indicator of the ecological condition of stream reaches and regional biological diversity. However, inadequate sampling effort underestimates the true number of species and, consequently, might provide erroneous information about the ecological conditions of, and trends in, aquatic environments. We sampled 24 to 39 stream reaches (each 150 m long) in seven megadiverse hydrologic units in the Brazilian states of Pará (Amazonia biome) and Minas Gerais (Cerrado biome) to estimate the sampling effort needed to reach asymptotes at hydrologic unit spatial extents. We also estimated how much of the local richness would have been captured if the sampled reach was 50 or 100-m-long. Our results indicate that up to 53 reaches must be sampled per hydrologic unit for attaining an estimated 90% of the fish species richness, depending on the relative number of rare species. In most units, 100-m-long reaches suffice for collecting about 90% of the local sampled richness. We conclude that the effort frequently used in neotropical streams is adequate to capture most of the local fish fauna. However, complete inventories of hydrographic regions would only be feasible with efforts and resources far greater than those commonly employed. Before sampling programs are implemented for estimating true species richness, adequate levels of sampling effort should be assessed wherever that richness is expected to be high.

AB - Fish species richness is one of the most common descriptors of aquatic biodiversity and an important indicator of the ecological condition of stream reaches and regional biological diversity. However, inadequate sampling effort underestimates the true number of species and, consequently, might provide erroneous information about the ecological conditions of, and trends in, aquatic environments. We sampled 24 to 39 stream reaches (each 150 m long) in seven megadiverse hydrologic units in the Brazilian states of Pará (Amazonia biome) and Minas Gerais (Cerrado biome) to estimate the sampling effort needed to reach asymptotes at hydrologic unit spatial extents. We also estimated how much of the local richness would have been captured if the sampled reach was 50 or 100-m-long. Our results indicate that up to 53 reaches must be sampled per hydrologic unit for attaining an estimated 90% of the fish species richness, depending on the relative number of rare species. In most units, 100-m-long reaches suffice for collecting about 90% of the local sampled richness. We conclude that the effort frequently used in neotropical streams is adequate to capture most of the local fish fauna. However, complete inventories of hydrographic regions would only be feasible with efforts and resources far greater than those commonly employed. Before sampling programs are implemented for estimating true species richness, adequate levels of sampling effort should be assessed wherever that richness is expected to be high.

U2 - 10.1007/s10641-021-01184-7

DO - 10.1007/s10641-021-01184-7

M3 - Journal article

VL - 104

SP - 1487

EP - 1499

JO - Environmental Biology of Fishes

JF - Environmental Biology of Fishes

SN - 0378-1909

ER -