6533b837fe1ef96bd12a3054

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Calculating minimum discrepancy to assess the nestedness of species assemblages

Mikko MönkkönenBengt Gunnar JonssonJean-michel RobergeFolmer Bokma

subject

Matrix (mathematics)EcologyDegree (graph theory)EcologyAnimal ecologyMonte Carlo methodStatisticsMetric (mathematics)Quantitative Biology::Populations and EvolutionNestednessBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics

description

Nestedness is a pattern whereby species-poor assemblages are composed of subsets of the species occurring in richer assemblages. One of the most commonly used measures of the degree of nestedness for presence-absence matrices is the ‘discrepancy’ metric. A hitherto neglected property of that metric is that it may take several values for a given site-by-species matrix in the presence of ties in the marginal totals. This complicates the quantification of nestedness for the observed presence-absence matrix, as well as the assessment of statistical significance, which is typically achieved through Monte Carlo simulations. A solution to the problem is to calculate the minimum discrepancy using a modified algorithm involving permutations of columns with tied totals.

https://doi.org/10.1556/comec.10.2009.2.1