Hierarchical Bayesian models in ecology: Reconstructing species interaction networks from non-homogeneous species abundance data

Andrej Aderhold, Dirk Husmeier, Jack J. Lennon, Colin M. Beale, V Anne Smith

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The relationships among organisms and their surroundings can be of immense complexity. To describe and understand an ecosystem as a tangled bank, multiple ways of interaction and their effects have to be considered, such as predation, competition, mutualism and facilitation. Understanding the resulting interaction networks is a challenge in changing environments, e.g. to predict knock-on effects of invasive species and to understand how climate change impacts biodiversity. The elucidation of complex ecological systems with their interactions will benefit enormously from the development of new machine learning tools that aim to infer the structure of interaction networks from field data. In the present study, we propose a novel Bayesian regression and multiple changepoint model (BRAM) for reconstructing species interaction networks from observed species distributions. The model has been devised to allow robust inference in the presence of spatial autocorrelation and distributional heterogeneity. We have evaluated the model on simulated data that combines a trophic niche model with a stochastic population model on a 2-dimensional lattice, and we have compared the performance of our model with L1-penalized sparse regression (LASSO) and non-linear Bayesian networks with the BDe scoring scheme. In addition, we have applied our method to plant ground coverage data from the western shore of the Outer Hebrides with the objective to infer the ecological interactions.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)55-64
JournalEcological Informatics
Volume11
Early online date23 May 2012
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2012

Keywords

  • Species interactions
  • Bayesian hierarchical models
  • Multiple changepoint process
  • Reversible jump Markov chain Monte Carlo
  • Niche model
  • Plant ground coverage data

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