SLOSS analysis does not show several small patches contain more species
than expected
Abstract
Overlap in species-accumulation curves ordered from small-large and
large-small (aka SLOSS analysis) is an important line of evidence
inferring weak positive diversity effects of fragmentation per se. Yet
combining patches in small-large order maximises the probability of
encountering new species for every patch, invalidating comparison with
large-small order. Controlling for this using simulated null
communities, I test species accumulation against a random expectation
for 201 published datasets from islands, habitat islands and fragments
and compare inference using both methods. SLOSS analysis found 67%
positive, 7% negative and 26% no response among datasets. Using
simulation, analogous values were 4%, 12% and 40% respectively with
no clear outcome in the remainder. SLOSS analysis provides unreliable
inference on the diversity effects of habitat subdivision. Accumulation
of species in small-large patch size order is more likely to result in
fewer than expected species than more, with no effect being the most
probable result.