Authors
José J Lahoz‐Monfort, Gurutzeta Guillera‐Arroita, Reid Tingley
Publication date
2016/5
Journal
Molecular Ecology Resources
Volume
16
Issue
3
Pages
673-685
Description
Environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling is prone to both false‐positive and false‐negative errors. We review statistical methods to account for such errors in the analysis of eDNA data and use simulations to compare the performance of different modelling approaches. Our simulations illustrate that even low false‐positive rates can produce biased estimates of occupancy and detectability. We further show that removing or classifying single PCR detections in an ad hoc manner under the suspicion that such records represent false positives, as sometimes advocated in the eDNA literature, also results in biased estimation of occupancy, detectability and false‐positive rates. We advocate alternative approaches to account for false‐positive errors that rely on prior information, or the collection of ancillary detection data at a subset of sites using a sampling method that is not prone to false‐positive errors. We illustrate the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JJ Lahoz‐Monfort, G Guillera‐Arroita, R Tingley - Molecular Ecology Resources, 2016