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28 April 2008 Spatial scale of GIS-derived categorical variables affects their ability to separate sites by community composition
Emily A. Holt, Bruce McCune, Peter Neitlich
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Abstract

Questions: How well do GIS-derived categorical variables (e.g., vegetation, soils, geology, elevation, geography, and physiography) separate plots based on community composition? How does the ability to distinguish plots by community composition vary with spatial scale, specifically number of patch types, patch size and spatial correlation? Both these questions bear on the effective use of stratifying variables in landscape ecology.

Location: Arctic tundra; Bering Land Bridge National Preserve, northwestern Alaska, USA.

Methods: We evaluated the strength of numerous alternative stratifying variables using the multi-response permutation procedure (MRPP). We also created groups based on lichen community composition, using cluster analyses, and evaluated the relationship between these groups and groupings within categorical variables using Mantel tests. Each test represents different measures of community separation, which were then evaluated with respect to each variable's spatial characteristics.

Results: We found each categorical variable derived from GIS separated lichen communities to some degree. Separation success ranged from strong (Alaska Subsections) to weak (Watersheds and Reindeer Ownership). Lichen community groups derived from cluster analysis demonstrated statistically significant relationships with 13 of the 17 categorical variables. Partialling out effects of spatial distance had little effect on these relationships.

Conclusions: Greater number of patch types and larger average patch sizes contribute to optimal success in separating lichen communities; geographic distance did not appear to significantly alter separation success. Group distinctiveness or strength increased with more patch types or groups. Alternatively, congruence between lichen community types derived from cluster analysis and the 17 categorical variables was inversely related to patch size and spatial correlation.

Emily A. Holt, Bruce McCune, and Peter Neitlich "Spatial scale of GIS-derived categorical variables affects their ability to separate sites by community composition," Applied Vegetation Science 11(3), 421-430, (28 April 2008). https://doi.org/10.3170/2008-7-18521
Received: 17 May 2007; Accepted: 1 February 2008; Published: 28 April 2008
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KEYWORDS
Alaska
lichen
Patch type
sampling
Stratification
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