E. S. Martinez, E. Vilaprinyo, J. Asín, R. C. Vaqueiro de Castro Alves
Studies on the spatial distribution of biodiversity require high-quality data and an appropriate spatial resolution. Reducing the spatial scale increases complexity and demands reliable data to capture environmental variability. Here, we define and optimize a pipeline based on the species-area relationship to determine the optimal resolution for biodiversity analysis. Using plant occurrence data for the Ebro Region (55,561 km²), we generated 167 alternative grids, ranging from polygons of 1 km² to a polygon that contains the total area of the region. Using piecewise regression identifies the threshold at which the area-to-richness slope starts to level off. From this threshold, we selected 5 optimal resolutions (~1,111 km²) that balance spatial detail and data reliability. This approach provides a robust framework for determining spatial resolutions that enhance biodiversity studies, ensuring an optimal trade-off between detail and record availability in the study region.
Palabras clave: spatial resolution, biodiversity, Ebro region, geospatial analysis, Spain
Programado
Sesión de pósters I
12 de junio de 2025 19:00
Foyer principal (coffe break)