Wan, H. C. J. Chizinski, C. L. Dolph, B. Vondracek and B. Wilson. 2010. The impact of rare taxa on measures of fish Index of Biotic Integrity. Ecological Indicators 10:781-788.
Abstract
The index of biotic integrity (IBI) is a commonly used bioassessment tool that integrates abundance and
richness measures to assess water quality. In developing IBIs that are both responsive to human
disturbance and resistant to natural variability and sampling error, water managersmust decide how to
weigh information about rare and abundant taxa, which in turn requires an understanding of the
sensitivity of indices to rare taxa. Herein, we investigated the influence of rare fish taxa (within the lower
5% of rank abundance curves) on IBI metric and total scores for stream sites in two of Minnesota’smajor
river basins, the St. Croix (n = 293 site visits) and Upper Mississippi (n = 210 site visits). We artificially
removed rare taxa from biological samples by (1) separately excluding each individual taxon that fell
within the lower 5% of rank abundance curves; (2) simultaneously excluding all taxa that had an
abundance of one (singletons) or two (doubletons); and (3) simultaneously excluding all taxa that fell
within the lower 5% of rank abundance curves. We then compared IBI metric and total scores before and
after removal of rare taxa using the normalized root mean square error (nRMSE) and regression analysis.
The difference in IBI metric and total scores increased as more taxa were removed. Moreover, when
multiple rare taxa were removed, the nRMSE was related to sample abundance and to total taxa richness,
with greater nRMSE observed in samples with a larger number of taxa or sample abundance. Metrics
based on relative abundance of fish taxa were less sensitive to the loss of rare taxa, whereas those based
on taxa richness were more sensitive, because taxa richness metrics give more weight to rare taxa
compared to the relative abundance metrics.