Temporal degradation of data limits biodiversity research
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Spatial and/or temporal biases in biodiversity data can directly influence the utility,
comparability, and reliability of ecological and evolutionary studies. While the effects
of biased spatial coverage of biodiversity data are relatively well known, temporal variation
in data quality (i.e., the congruence between recorded and actual information)
has received much less attention. Here, we develop a conceptual framework for understanding
the influence of time on biodiversity data quality based on three main
processes: (1) the natural dynamics of ecological systems—such as species turnover or
local extinction; (2) periodic taxonomic revisions, and; (3) the loss of physical and
metadata due to inefficient curation, accidents, or funding shortfalls. Temporal decay
in data quality driven by these three processes has fundamental consequences for the
usage and comparability of data collected in different time periods. Data decay can be
partly ameliorated by adopting standard protocols for generation, storage, and sharing
data and metadata. However, some data degradation is unavoidable due to natural
variations in ecological systems. Consequently, changes in biodiversity data quality
over time need be carefully assessed and, if possible, taken into account when analyzing
aging datasets.
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TESSAROLO, Geiziane; LADLE, Richard; RANGEL, Thiago; HORTAL Joaquin. Temporal degradation of data limits biodiversity research. Ecology and Evolution, Nova Jersey, v. 7, n. 17, p. 6863-6870, 2017. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.3259. Disponível em: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.3259. Acesso em: 23 fev. 2023.