| Literature DB >> 24587149 |
Simon Ducatez1, Louis Lefebvre1.
Abstract
Between species differences in research effort can lead to biases in our global view of evolution, ecology and conservation. The increase in meta-taxonomic comparative analyses on birds underlines the need to better address how research effort is distributed in this class. Methods have been developed to choose which species should be studied to obtain unbiased comparative data sets, but a precise and global knowledge of research effort is required to be able to properly apply them. We address this issue by providing a data set of research effort (number of papers from 1978 to 2008 in the Zoological Record database) estimates for the 10,064 species of birds. We then test whether research effort is associated with phylogeny, geography and eleven different life history and ecological traits. We show that phylogeny accounts for a large proportion of the variance, while geographic range and all the tested traits are also significant contributors to research effort variance. We identify avian taxa that are under- and overstudied and address the importance of research effort biases in evaluating vulnerability to extinction, with non-threatened species studied twice as much as threatened ones. Our research effort data set covering the entire class Aves provides a tool for researchers to incorporate this potential confounding variable in comparative analyses.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24587149 PMCID: PMC3935962 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0089955
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Number of reviews, comparative analyses and meta-analyses referenced on the Web of Science in ecology, evolution and conservation between 1995 and 2012 in birds, mammals and herptiles (amphibians and reptiles).
The three slopes are significantly different from 0 (p<0.006 in the 3 cases), and the increase in the number of review papers across time is significantly smaller in amphibians and reptiles than it is in birds (p = 0.009) or mammals (p<0.001), but does not significantly differ between birds and mammals (p = 0.332).
Intra-class Coefficients (ICC) for the different taxonomic levels and for the 3 levels together.
| ICC | |
| Order | 0.344 |
| Family nested in order | 0.067 |
| Genus nested in family | 0.135 |
| Together | 0.546 |
Research effort and species number in the different orders, ranked in alphabetic order.
| Order | Publication number | Species number | Publication number per species (mean ± SE) |
| Anseriformes | 21449 | 172 | 124.703±18.539 |
| Apodiformes | 3401 | 443 | 7.677±1.520 |
| Caprimulgiformes | 1140 | 125 | 9.120±2.335 |
| Charadriiformes | 39990 | 356 | 112.331±10.243 |
| Ciconiiformes | 10290 | 120 | 85.750±18.555 |
| Coliiformes | 99 | 6 | 16.500±6.350 |
| Columbiformes | 5090 | 336 | 15.149±4.940 |
| Coraciiformes | 2860 | 220 | 13.000±2.997 |
| Cuculiformes | 1872 | 167 | 11.210±3.779 |
| Falconiformes | 28831 | 312 | 92.407±13.107 |
| Galliformes | 13735 | 289 | 47.526±10.037 |
| Gaviiformes | 1142 | 5 | 228.400±63.834 |
| Gruiformes | 7331 | 226 | 32.438±6.726 |
| Passeriformes | 93614 | 5954 | 15.723±1.027 |
| Pelecaniformes | 6092 | 66 | 92.303±26.918 |
| Phoenicopteriformes | 773 | 6 | 128.833±59.165 |
| Piciformes | 4743 | 410 | 11.568±2.120 |
| Pocicepediformes | 2166 | 22 | 98.455±35.569 |
| Procelariiformes | 6543 | 131 | 49.947±6.787 |
| Psittaciformes | 6296 | 375 | 16.789±2.083 |
| Sphenisciformes | 2994 | 18 | 166.333±37.923 |
| Strigiformes | 10769 | 201 | 53.577±14.367 |
| Struthioniformes | 1567 | 13 | 120.538±59.927 |
| Tinamiformes | 215 | 47 | 4.574±1.216 |
| Trogoniformes | 133 | 44 | 3.023±0.756 |
Figure 2a) Relationship between the total number of publications per order and the number of species per order. b) Relationship between the average number of publications per species within each order, and the number of species per order. Orders with low species numbers and low publication number per species are identified for information (see Table 2 for details on each order).
Publications per Biogeographic realm, ranked by decreasing number of publications per species.
| Realm | Publication number | Species number | Publication number per species (mean ± SE) |
| Europe | 2328 | 27 | 86.222±27.553 |
| Several | 213562 | 2673 | 79.896±3.749 |
| North-America | 14644 | 323 | 45.337±5.798 |
| Australasia | 8520 | 645 | 13.209±1.314 |
| Africa | 12535 | 1765 | 7.102±0.525 |
| Eastern-Asia | 12599 | 1917 | 6.572±1.066 |
| Central-Asia | 13 | 3 | 4.333±2.404 |
| Caribbean | 703 | 164 | 4.287±0.619 |
| South-America | 7706 | 2272 | 3.392±0.196 |
| Oceania | 295 | 144 | 2.049±0.283 |
| Middle-East | 47 | 23 | 2.043±0.424 |
| Antarctica | 5 | 3 | 1.667±1.202 |
| Central-America | 167 | 101 | 1.653±0.540 |
Four extinct species had an unknown biogeographic realm and are thus not included here. The low number of species in Europe, Central Asia, Middle-East, Antarctica and Central America is due to the fact that most species from these areas occupy several geographic areas, and were thus included in the category “several”.
Figure 3Relationship between research effort and species traits (panels c and f: mean ± se).
Correlations between research effort and species traits, ranked by decreasing correlation coefficient. n = species number.
| Correlates of research effort | Spearman rho |
| n |
| Population size | 0.538 | <0.001 | 2945 |
| Distribution range | 0.441 | <0.001 | 9758 |
| Clutch size | 0.337 | <0.001 | 4954 |
| Body mass | 0.324 | <0.001 | 7703 |
| Generation length | 0.288 | <0.001 | 9147 |
| Habitat breadth | 0.276 | <0.001 | 9870 |
Differences in research efforts (mean publication number per species) according to species breeding system. n = species number.
| Breeding system | Research effort (mean ± SE) | n |
| Female only | 36.910±5.100 | 766 |
| Brood parasite | 29.878±12.587 | 90 |
| Pair | 28.831±1.266 | 7558 |
| Cooperation | 23.787±4.204 | 839 |
| Male only | 19.764±4.825 | 89 |
| Geothermal | 13.600±4.343 | 5 |
Phylogenetic Mixed Model explaining research effort as a function of 7 life history traits.
| Variable | pm | CI |
|
| Distribution range | 0.424 | [0.385; 0.460] | <0.001 |
| Migration | 0.414 | [0.371; 0.449] | <0.001 |
| Generation length | 0.348 | [0.272; 0.406] | <0.001 |
| Clutch size | 0.315 | [0.262; 0.369] | <0.001 |
| Habitat breadth | 0.152 | [0.114; 0.188] | <0.001 |
| Body mass | 0.086 | [0.035; 0.131] | 0.003 |
Models were run with 10 different phylogenies, and posterior means (pm), CI (Confidence Interval) and p-values were averaged over the 10 models with 10 different phylogenetic trees (see text for details). n = species number. n = species number.