A COMPARISON OF QUANTITATIVE METHODS FOR EXAMINING LANDSCAPE PATTERN AND SCALE

被引:67
作者
CULLINAN, VI
THOMAS, JM
机构
[1] Pacific Northwest Laboratory Richland, 99352, Washington
关键词
SPATIAL HETEROGENEITY; ECOLOGICAL PATTERNING; ECOLOGICAL SCALE; QUANTITATIVE METHODS; PATCH;
D O I
10.1007/BF00133311
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Ecologists have long recognized the importance of spatial and temporal patterns that characterize heterogeneity in landscapes. However, despite the realization that inferences about ecological phenomena are scale dependent, little attention has been paid to determining appropriate scales of measurement (e.g., plot or grain size) in studies of landscape dynamics or ecosystem change. This paper compares the results from three data sets using several quantitative methods available for characterizing landscape heterogeneity and/or for determining scale of measurement. Methods evaluated include tests of non-randomness, estimation of patch size, spectral analysis, fractals, variance ratio analysis, and correlation analysis. The results showed that no one method provides consistently good estimates of scale. Thus, sampling strategies for landscape studies should be derived from estimates of patch size and/or scale of pattern obtained from more than one of these methods.
引用
收藏
页码:211 / 227
页数:17
相关论文
共 40 条
  • [1] Addicott J.F., Aho J.M., Antolin M.F., Padilla D.K., Richardson J.S., Soluk D.A., Ecological neighborhoods: scaling environmental patterns, Oikos, 49, pp. 340-346, (1987)
  • [2] Anderson D.J., Studies on structure in plant communities. I. An analysis of limestone grassland in Monk's Dale, Derbyshire, The Journal of Ecology, 53, pp. 97-107, (1965)
  • [3] Artrong A.C., On the fractal dimensions of some transient soil properties, Journal of Soil Science, 37, pp. 641-652, (1986)
  • [4] Bartlett M.S., The spectral analysis of two-dimensional point processes, Biometrika, 51, pp. 299-311, (1964)
  • [5] Burrough P.A., Fractal dimensions of landscapes and other environmental data, Nature, 294, pp. 240-242, (1981)
  • [6] Burrough P.A., Multiscale sources of spatial variation in soil. I. The application of fractal concepts to nested levels of soil variation, Journal of Soil Science, 34, pp. 577-597, (1983)
  • [7] Carlile D.W., Skalski J.R., Batker J.E., Thomas J.M., Cullinan V.I., Determination of ecological scale, Landscape Ecology, 2, pp. 203-213, (1989)
  • [8] Clark I., Practical Geostatistics, (1979)
  • [9] Clark P.J., Evans F.C., Distance to nearest neighbor as a measure of spatial relationships in populations, Ecology, 35, pp. 445-453, (1954)
  • [10] Curran P.J., The semivariogram in remote sensing: an introduction, Remote Sensing of Environment, 24, pp. 493-507, (1988)