Další formáty:
BibTeX
LaTeX
RIS
@article{720684, author = {Roleček, Jan and Chytrý, Milan and Hájek, Michal and Lvončík, Samuel and Tichý, Lubomír}, article_location = {Pruhonice}, article_number = {2}, keywords = {Ecological methodology; Large-scale vegetation patterns; Macroecology; Phytosociology; Spatial scale; Statistical testing; Vegetation databases}, language = {eng}, issn = {1211-9520}, journal = {Folia Geobotanica}, title = {Sampling design in large-scale vegetation studies: Do not sacrifice ecological thinking to statistical purism!}, url = {http://www.sci.muni.cz/botany/rolecek/Rolecek_et_al_2007_Folia.pdf}, volume = {42}, year = {2007} }
TY - JOUR ID - 720684 AU - Roleček, Jan - Chytrý, Milan - Hájek, Michal - Lvončík, Samuel - Tichý, Lubomír PY - 2007 TI - Sampling design in large-scale vegetation studies: Do not sacrifice ecological thinking to statistical purism! JF - Folia Geobotanica VL - 42 IS - 2 SP - 199-208 EP - 199-208 PB - Institute of Botany SN - 12119520 KW - Ecological methodology KW - Large-scale vegetation patterns KW - Macroecology KW - Phytosociology KW - Spatial scale KW - Statistical testing KW - Vegetation databases UR - http://www.sci.muni.cz/botany/rolecek/Rolecek_et_al_2007_Folia.pdf N2 - Most of the historical phytosociological data on vegetation composition have been sampled preferentially and thus belong to those ecological data that do not fulfill the statistical assumption of independence of observations, necessary for valid statistical testing and inference. Nevertheless, phytosociological data have been recently used for various ecological meta-analyses, especially in studies of large-scale vegetation patterns. For this reason, we focus on the comparison of preferential sampling with other sampling designs that have been recommended as more convenient alternatives from the point of view of statistical theory. We discuss that while simple random sampling, systematic sampling and stratified random sampling better meet some of the statistical assumptions, preferential sampling yields data sets that cover a broader range of vegetation variability. Moreover, todays large phytosociological databases provide huge amounts of vegetation data with unrivalled geographic extent and density. We conclude that in the near future ecologists will not be able to replace the preferentially sampled phytosociological data in large-scale studies. At the same time, phytosociological databases have to be complemented with relevés of vegetation composed mostly of common and generalist species, which are under-represented in historical data. Stratified random sampling seems to be a suitable tool for doing this. Nevertheless, a methodology and input data for stratification have to be developed to make stratified random sampling an ecologically more relevant and practical method. ER -
ROLEČEK, Jan, Milan CHYTRÝ, Michal HÁJEK, Samuel LVONČÍK a Lubomír TICHÝ. Sampling design in large-scale vegetation studies: Do not sacrifice ecological thinking to statistical purism! \textit{Folia Geobotanica}. Pruhonice: Institute of Botany, 2007, roč.~42, č.~2, s.~199-208. ISSN~1211-9520.
|