Spatiotemporal joint species distribution modelling: A basis function approach

Author:

Hui Francis K. C.1ORCID,Warton David I.2ORCID,Foster Scott D.3ORCID,Haak Christopher R.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research School of Finance, Actuarial Studies and Statistics The Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

2. School of Mathematics and Statistics, and Evolution & Ecology Research Centre The University of New South Wales Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. Data61, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation Hobart Tasmania Australia

4. Urban Coast Institute Monmouth University West Long Branch New Jersey USA

Abstract

AbstractWe introduce community‐level basis function models (CBFMs) as an approach for spatiotemporal joint distribution modelling. CBFMs can be viewed as related to spatiotemporal latent variable models, where the latent variables are replaced by a set of pre‐specified spatiotemporal basis functions which are common across species.In a CBFM, the coefficients that link the basis functions to each species are treated as random slopes. As such, the CBFM can be formulated to have a similar structure to a generalised additive model. This allows us to adapt existing techniques to fit CBFMs efficiently.CBFMs can be used for a variety of reasons, such as inferring patterns of habitat use in space and time, understanding how residual covariation between species varies spatially and/or temporally, and spatiotemporal predictions of species‐ and community‐level quantities.A simulation study and an application to data from a bottom trawl survey conducted across the U.S. Northeast shelf show that CBFMs can achieve similar and sometimes better predictive performance compared to existing approaches for spatiotemporal joint species distribution modelling, while being computationally more scalable.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecological Modeling,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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