Evaluating Functional Diversity: Missing Trait Data and the Importance of Species Abundance Structure and Data Transformation

PLoS One. 2016 Feb 16;11(2):e0149270. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0149270. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Functional diversity (FD) is an important component of biodiversity that quantifies the difference in functional traits between organisms. However, FD studies are often limited by the availability of trait data and FD indices are sensitive to data gaps. The distribution of species abundance and trait data, and its transformation, may further affect the accuracy of indices when data is incomplete. Using an existing approach, we simulated the effects of missing trait data by gradually removing data from a plant, an ant and a bird community dataset (12, 59, and 8 plots containing 62, 297 and 238 species respectively). We ranked plots by FD values calculated from full datasets and then from our increasingly incomplete datasets and compared the ranking between the original and virtually reduced datasets to assess the accuracy of FD indices when used on datasets with increasingly missing data. Finally, we tested the accuracy of FD indices with and without data transformation, and the effect of missing trait data per plot or per the whole pool of species. FD indices became less accurate as the amount of missing data increased, with the loss of accuracy depending on the index. But, where transformation improved the normality of the trait data, FD values from incomplete datasets were more accurate than before transformation. The distribution of data and its transformation are therefore as important as data completeness and can even mitigate the effect of missing data. Since the effect of missing trait values pool-wise or plot-wise depends on the data distribution, the method should be decided case by case. Data distribution and data transformation should be given more careful consideration when designing, analysing and interpreting FD studies, especially where trait data are missing. To this end, we provide the R package "traitor" to facilitate assessments of missing trait data.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Biodiversity*
  • Quantitative Trait, Heritable*
  • Species Specificity

Grants and funding

MM was supported by VEGA 2/0016/15 and the project No. APVV-0866-12, TP was supported by European Social Fund's Doctoral Studies and Internationalisation Programme DoRa (T6) and Estonian Research Council (grant no IUT 20-31), NSP was supported by the Grant Agency of University of South Bohemia (156/2013/P) and the Czech Science Foundation (14-36098G), SHL was supported by the SAFE Project (including funding from the Sime Darby Foundation) and the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), and KS was supported by GACR No. 14-32024P. YLBP was supported by the project Postdoc USB (reg.no. CZ.1.07/2.3.00/30.0006) realized through EU Education for Competitiveness Operational Programme. This project is funded by European Social Fund and Czech State Budget. YLBP is also supported by a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions Individual Fellowship (MSCA-IF) within the European Program Horizon 2020(DRYFUN Project 656035). LG received funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement no. GA-2010-267243 - PLANT FELLOWS; FdB and JL were supported by GACR P505/12/1296.