From grimoire
Guides designing repeatable field biodiversity surveys: sampling strategy, site selection, species identification, and data recording for statistically valid ecological assessments.
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Design a repeatable field biodiversity survey by selecting appropriate sampling strategy, site layout, identification methods, and data recording protocols to produce statistically valid species richness and abundance estimates.
Design a repeatable field biodiversity survey by selecting appropriate sampling strategy, site layout, identification methods, and data recording protocols to produce statistically valid species richness and abundance estimates.
Adopted by: Biodiversity survey methodology is standardized by IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature), Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), and national natural history agencies (US Fish & Wildlife Service, Natural England, CSIRO). The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) requires standardized monitoring protocols for reporting under the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Academic ecology uses Krebs and Magurran's frameworks for calculating biodiversity indices. Impact: A poorly designed survey produces data that cannot be replicated, compared to other sites, or used to detect change over time. The most common errors — insufficient plot size, non-random site selection, and inconsistent species identification — systematically bias estimates of richness and abundance. A correctly designed survey produces defensible, publishable data that can detect 10–20% population changes over multi-year monitoring programs.
Before designing the protocol, clarify:
Scope determines method — surveying breeding birds requires visit timing aligned with breeding season; surveying amphibians requires night surveys during breeding; plant surveys should cover peak phenological diversity.
Three main approaches:
Complete census (systematic): record every individual in the defined area; feasible only in small, well-defined areas with high surveyor capacity.
Transect surveys: walk defined lines of set length; record species in a belt of defined width on each side.
Quadrat sampling: randomly placed plots of fixed area; count all species within.
N=20 minimum: fewer than 20 sampling units produces unreliable diversity estimates for most habitats.
Species identification standards:
Data recording:
From the collected data, calculate:
If the accumulation curve has not flattened, the survey is under-sampled — increase sampling intensity before drawing conclusions about total richness.
For monitoring to detect change:
Change detection requires at least 3 repeat surveys to calculate trends; 5+ surveys for statistical power.
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