The AMBI index

The basis of the AMBI index is that soft-bottom macrofauna are divided into groups according to their sensitivity to increasing environmental stress. The distribution of counts of individuals or relative abundance between the different groups is used to calculate a quantitative measure of the ecological quality of the benthic environment.

Species Groups

Input to the AMBI() function is a dataframe of species counts with optional grouping variables, e.g. station or replicate IDs. The function matches species names in the input data with names in the AMBI species list, in order to categorise the observed species according to the AMBI method. The tool then calculates the AMBI index resulting from the distribution of individuals between the groups.

The AMBI species list gives the groups (I, II, III, IV, V) in which each species is classified, as described by Borja, Franco, and Pérez (2000).

The list of species and their groups has been updated several times by the authors of the AMBI software. The version of the list used here is from 8. October 2024.

After calculating the fractions \(f_i\) of all individuals belonging to each group \(i \in{} \{I, II, III, IV, V\}\), then the index is given by:

\[ AMBI = 0.0 * f_{I} + 1.5 * f_{II} + 3 * f_{III} + 4.5 * f_{IV} + 6 * f_{V} \]

So, the greater the proportion of sensitive species, the lower the resulting AMBI index. A sample consisting 100% of species from the most sensitive category (Group I) will have an AMBI index of 0.0. A population consisting entirely of species from Group V will have an index of 6.0.

M-AMBI - the multivariate AMBI index

MAMBI() calculates M-AMBI the multivariate AMBI index, based on the three separate species diversity metrics:

The principles of the M-AMBI index are described by Muxika, Borja, and Bald (2007)

“AMBI, richness and diversity, combined with the use, in a further development, of factor analysis together with discriminant analysis, is presented as an objective tool (named here M-AMBI) in assessing ecological quality status”

It is, of course, possible to calculate M-AMBI using data generated in other analyses, outside the ambiR package but the AMBI() function can conveniently provide all 3 of the metrics used as variables in the M-AMBI factorial analysis.

AMBI software

The AMBI software was developed as a free standalone software to allow users to perform AMBI index calculations. Later versions were updated to include the multivariate index M-AMBI calculations and adjustments to the species list used to assign species to ecological groups. The software is maintained and updated by AZTI https://www.azti.es, where the latest version can be downloaded.

The ambiR package has been extensively tested and gives identical results to the AMBI software, as long as the version of species list select corresponds to the to the version used by the software.

References

Borja, Á, J Franco, and V Pérez. 2000. “A Marine Biotic Index to Establish the Ecological Quality of Soft-Bottom Benthos Within European Estuarine and Coastal Environments.” Marine Pollution Bulletin 40 (12): 1100–1114. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-326X(00)00061-8.
Muxika, I, Á Borja, and J Bald. 2007. “Using Historical Data, Expert Judgement and Multivariate Analysis in Assessing Reference Conditions and Benthic Ecological Status, According to the European Water Framework Directive.” Marine Pollution Bulletin 55 (1): 16–29. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2006.05.025.