Rarefaction (ecology)

In ecology, rarefaction is a technique to assess species richness from the results of sampling. Rarefaction allows the calculation of species richness for a given number of individual samples, based on the construction of so-called rarefaction curves. This curve is a plot of the number of species as a function of the number of samples. Rarefaction curves generally grow rapidly at first, as the most common species are found, but the curves plateau as only the rarest species remain to be sampled.[1]

The issue that occurs when sampling various species in a community is that the larger the number of individuals sampled, the more species that will be found. Rarefaction curves are created by randomly re-sampling the pool of N samples multiple times and then plotting the average number of species found in each sample (1,2, ... N). "Thus rarefaction generates the expected number of species in a small collection of n individuals (or n samples) drawn at random from the large pool of N samples.".[2]

A set of rarefaction curves from a NASA biology study[3]
  1. ^ "Ganter Homepage". Tnstate.edu. Retrieved 2013-08-16.
  2. ^ Gotelli, Nicholas J.; Colwell, Robert K. (22 July 2001). "Quantifying biodiversity: procedures and pitfalls in the measurement and comparison of species richness". Ecology Letters. 4 (4): 379–391. doi:10.1046/j.1461-0248.2001.00230.x.
  3. ^ Huber, Julie and Mitchel Sagin (2007). "Microbial Diversity in Deep Ocean". NASA Astrobiology Institute. Retrieved 2013-08-16.[dead link]

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