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Portrait of Henrik Smith. Photo.

Henrik Smith

Professor

Portrait of Henrik Smith. Photo.

Reliably predicting pollinator abundance : Challenges of calibrating process-based ecological models

Author

  • Emma Gardner
  • Tom D. Breeze
  • Yann Clough
  • Henrik G. Smith
  • Katherine C.R. Baldock
  • Alistair Campbell
  • Michael P.D. Garratt
  • Mark A.K. Gillespie
  • William E. Kunin
  • Megan McKerchar
  • Jane Memmott
  • Simon G. Potts
  • Deepa Senapathi
  • Graham N. Stone
  • Felix Wäckers
  • Duncan B. Westbury
  • Andrew Wilby
  • Tom H. Oliver

Summary, in English

Pollination is a key ecosystem service for global agriculture but evidence of pollinator population declines is growing. Reliable spatial modelling of pollinator abundance is essential if we are to identify areas at risk of pollination service deficit and effectively target resources to support pollinator populations. Many models exist which predict pollinator abundance but few have been calibrated against observational data from multiple habitats to ensure their predictions are accurate. We selected the most advanced process-based pollinator abundance model available and calibrated it for bumblebees and solitary bees using survey data collected at 239 sites across Great Britain. We compared three versions of the model: one parameterised using estimates based on expert opinion, one where the parameters are calibrated using a purely data-driven approach and one where we allow the expert opinion estimates to inform the calibration process. All three model versions showed significant agreement with the survey data, demonstrating this model's potential to reliably map pollinator abundance. However, there were significant differences between the nesting/floral attractiveness scores obtained by the two calibration methods and from the original expert opinion scores. Our results highlight a key universal challenge of calibrating spatially explicit, process-based ecological models. Notably, the desire to reliably represent complex ecological processes in finely mapped landscapes necessarily generates a large number of parameters, which are challenging to calibrate with ecological and geographical data that are often noisy, biased, asynchronous and sometimes inaccurate. Purely data-driven calibration can therefore result in unrealistic parameter values, despite appearing to improve model-data agreement over initial expert opinion estimates. We therefore advocate a combined approach where data-driven calibration and expert opinion are integrated into an iterative Delphi-like process, which simultaneously combines model calibration and credibility assessment. This may provide the best opportunity to obtain realistic parameter estimates and reliable model predictions for ecological systems with expert knowledge gaps and patchy ecological data.

Department/s

  • Centre for Environmental and Climate Science (CEC)
  • BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate

Publishing year

2020-12

Language

English

Pages

1673-1689

Publication/Series

Methods in Ecology and Evolution

Volume

11

Issue

12

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons Inc.

Topic

  • Ecology
  • Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use

Keywords

  • calibration
  • credibility assessment
  • Delphi panels
  • ecosystem services
  • pollinators
  • process-based models
  • validation

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2041-210X