Abstract
Aim Quantify potential gains to insect data on the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) through further digitisation of natural history collections, assess to what degree this would fill biases in spatial and environmental record coverage, and deepen understanding of environmental bias with regard to climate rarity.
Location Afrotropical realm (mainland only)
Time period 1814-2022
Major taxa studied Catharsius Hope, 1837 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae)
Methods We compared inventory completeness of Afrotropical Catharsius GBIF data to a dataset which combined these with records from a recent taxonomic revision. We analysed how this improved dataset reduced regional and environmental bias in the distribution of occurrence records using an approach that identifies well-surveyed spatial units of 100×100km as well as emerging techniques to classify rarity of climates.
Results The number of cells for which inventory completeness could be calculated, as well as coverage of climate types by “well-sampled” cells, increased three-fold when using the combined set compared to the GBIF set. Improvements to sampling in Central and Western Africa were particularly striking. Coverage of rare climates was similarly improved, as not a single well-sampled cell from the GBIF data alone occurred in the rarest climate types. Inclusion of further records from natural history collections increased the total number of occurrences, but also filled persisting spatial and environmental data gaps on GBIF.
Main conclusions These findings support existing literature that suggests data gaps on GBIF are still pervasive, especially for insects and in the tropics and, so, is not yet ready to serve as a standalone data source for all taxa. Biases in spatial coverage of records translate to uneven sampling of environmental conditions, hindering our ability to describe the full breadth of species’ niches, especially so in climates that occur infrequently. However, we show that natural history collections hold the necessary information to fill many of these gaps, and their further digitisation should be a priority.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
cristinaronquillo{at}mncn.csic.es, jhortal{at}mncn.csic.es