Centre for Integrative Ecology, School of Life and Environmental Science, Deakin University, Geelong, 3216, Australia.
Oecologia. 2013 Feb;171(2):339-45. doi: 10.1007/s00442-012-2426-5. Epub 2012 Aug 11.
Sampling animals from the wild for study is something nearly every biologist has done, but despite our best efforts to obtain random samples of animals, 'hidden' trait biases may still exist. For example, consistent behavioral traits can affect trappability/catchability, independent of obvious factors such as size and gender, and these traits are often correlated with other repeatable physiological and/or life history traits. If so, systematic sampling bias may exist for any of these traits. The extent to which this is a problem, of course, depends on the magnitude of bias, which is presently unknown because the underlying trait distributions in populations are usually unknown, or unknowable. Indeed, our present knowledge about sampling bias comes from samples (not complete population censuses), which can possess bias to begin with. I had the unique opportunity to create naturalized populations of fish by seeding each of four small fishless lakes with equal densities of slow-, intermediate-, and fast-growing fish. Using sampling methods that are not size-selective, I observed that fast-growing fish were up to two-times more likely to be sampled than slower-growing fish. This indicates substantial and systematic bias with respect to an important life history trait (growth rate). If correlations between behavioral, physiological and life-history traits are as widespread as the literature suggests, then many animal samples may be systematically biased with respect to these traits (e.g., when collecting animals for laboratory use), and affect our inferences about population structure and abundance. I conclude with a discussion on ways to minimize sampling bias for particular physiological/behavioral/life-history types within animal populations.
从野外采集动物进行研究是几乎每个生物学家都做过的事情,但尽管我们尽最大努力获得动物的随机样本,“隐藏”的特征偏差仍可能存在。例如,一致的行为特征可能会影响可捕获性/可捕获性,而与大小和性别等明显因素无关,这些特征通常与其他可重复的生理和/或生活史特征相关。如果是这样,任何这些特征都可能存在系统抽样偏差。当然,这是一个问题的程度取决于偏差的大小,目前尚不清楚,因为种群中潜在的特征分布通常是未知的,或者是不可知的。事实上,我们目前对抽样偏差的了解来自于样本(不是完整的人口普查),这些样本本身可能存在偏差。我有机会通过在四个小鱼塘中以相等的密度播种慢、中、快生长的鱼来创建鱼类自然种群。使用不选择性别的采样方法,我观察到快速生长的鱼被采样的可能性是生长较慢的鱼的两倍。这表明重要的生活史特征(生长率)存在实质性和系统性偏差。如果行为、生理和生活史特征之间的相关性像文献所表明的那样广泛,那么许多动物样本可能会在这些特征上存在系统偏差(例如,在收集动物用于实验室使用时),并影响我们对种群结构和丰度的推断。最后,我讨论了在动物种群中针对特定生理/行为/生活史类型最小化采样偏差的方法。