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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: O WildiPublisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd Imprint: Wiley-Blackwell Dimensions: Width: 16.50cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 24.10cm Weight: 0.504kg ISBN: 9780470661017ISBN 10: 0470661011 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 09 April 2010 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsPreface. List of Figures. List of Tables. 1 Introduction. 2 Patterns in Vegetation Ecology. 2.1 Pattern recognition. 2.2 Interpretation of patterns. 2.3 Sampling for pattern recognition. 3 Transformation. 3.1 Data types. 3.2 Scalar transformation and the species enigma. 3.3 Vector transformation. 3.4 Example: Transformation of plant cover data. 4 Multivariate Comparison. 4.1 Resemblance in multivariate space. 4.2 Geometric approach. 4.3 Contingency testing. 4.4 Product moments. 4.5 The resemblance matrix. 4.6 Assessing the quality of classifications. 5 Ordination. 5.1 Why ordination? 5.2 Principal component analysis (PCA). 5.3 Principal coordinates analysis (PCOA). 5.4 Correspondence analysis (CA). 5.5 The horseshoe or arch effect. 5.6 Ranking by orthogonal components. 6 Classification. 6.1 Group structures. 6.2 Linkage clustering. 6.3 Minimum-variance clustering. 6.4 Average-linkage clustering: UPGMA, WPGMA, UPGMC and WPGMC. 6.5 Forming groups. 6.6 Structured synoptic tables. 7 Joining Ecological Patterns. 7.1 Pattern and ecological response. 7.2 Analysis of variance. 7.3 Correlating resemblance matrices. 7.4 Contingency tables. 7.5 Constrained ordination. 8 Static Explanatory Modelling . 8.1 Predictive or explanatory? 8.2 The Bayes probability model. 8.3 Predicting wetland vegetation (example). 9 Assessing Vegetation Change in Time. 9.1 Coping with time. 9.2 Rate of change and trend. 9.3 Markov models. 9.4 Space-for-time substitution. 9.5 Dynamics in pollen diagrams (example). 10 Dynamic Modelling. 10.1 Simulating time processes. 10.2 Including space processes. 10.3 Processes in the Swiss National Park (SNP). 11 Large Data Sets: Wetland Patterns. 11.1 Large data sets differ. 11.2 Phytosociology revisited. 11.3 Suppressing outliers. 11.4 Replacing species with new attributes. 11.5 Large synoptic tables? 12 Swiss Forests: A Case Study. 12.1 Aim of the study. 12.2 Structure of the data set. 12.3 Methods. 12.4 Selected questions. 12.5 Conclusions. Appendix A On Using Software. A.1 Spreadsheets. A.2 Databases. A.3 Software for multivariate analysis. Appendix B Data Sets Used. References. Index.ReviewsThis book will be a valuable addition to the shelves of early postgraduate candidates and postdoctoral researchers. ( Austral Ecology ,1 November 2012) All students sampling vegetation data should be aware that this is a really nice book summarizing the approaches used in vegetation ecology ... I enjoyed reading this book and can recommend it for students of botany or general ecology. It is also well suited teaching material. ( Folia Geobot , 1 December 2011) This book will be a valuable addition to the shelves of early postgraduate candidates and postdoctoral researchers. ( Austral Ecology ,1 November 2012) Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |