Staggered nested designs to assess scales of variability: the advantages of a spatially explicit analysis |
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Authors: | Cole Russell G |
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Affiliation: | National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, P.O. Box 893, Nelson, New Zealand. r.cole@niwa.co.nz |
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Abstract: | A staggered nested sampling design was used to identify spatial scales of variation in the abundance of an intertidal clam Austrovenus stutchburyi. A georeferenced sampling design permitted assessment of abundance at spatial lags between 0.1 and 87 m. An analysis of variance approach produced imprecise estimates of variability, whereas spatially explicit analyses improved the resolution greatly. A geostatistical model identified the spatial scale of residual variance as 13 m and that of the asymptote of spatial dependence as 17 m. It also permitted mapping of bivalve abundance. Staggered nested designs are highly efficient for comparing hierarchies of scale, but in this study analysis of detailed positional information was required to tease out useful spatial information. |
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