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Disentangling the role of remotely sensed spectral heterogeneity as a proxy for North American plant species richness
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Due to the difficulties of field-based species data collection at wide spatial scales, remotely sensed spectral diversity has been advocated as one of the most effective proxies of ecosystem and species diversity. It is widely accepted that the relationship between species and spectral diversity is scale dependent. However, few studies have evaluated the impacts of scale on species diversity estimates from remote sensing data. In this paper we tested the species versus spectral relationship over very large scales (extents) with a varying spatial grain using floristic data of North America. Spectral diversity explained a low amount of variance while spatial extent of the sampling units (floras) explained a high amount of variance based on results from our variance partitioning analyses. This leads to the conclusion that spectral diversity must be carefully related to species diversity, explicitly taking into account potential area effects.
- Subjects :
- Area effect
Spectral variation hypothesis
Data collection
Ecology
Biodiversity
Species diversity
Variance partitioning
Plant ecology
Spectral variation hypothesi
Partizione della varianza
Animal ecology
Settore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIA
Environmental science
Alpha diversity
Ecosystem
Area effects
Species richness
Physical geography
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ad0320ffc5396136117987641e7bfb4e