A Generic, Computer-assisted Method for Rapid Vegetation Classification and Survey: Tropical and Temperate Case Studies

Standard methods of vegetation classification and survey tend to be either too broad for management purposes or too reliant on local species to support inter-regional comparisons. A new approach to this problem uses species-independent plant functional types with a wide spectrum of environmental sen...

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Main Author: Andrew N. Gillison
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2002-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol6/iss2/art3/
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spelling doaj-b0f2a77c1d874b4687a665dcb682c32b2020-11-24T23:38:40ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872002-12-0162310.5751/ES-00428-060203428A Generic, Computer-assisted Method for Rapid Vegetation Classification and Survey: Tropical and Temperate Case StudiesAndrew N. Gillison0Center for Biodiversity ManagementStandard methods of vegetation classification and survey tend to be either too broad for management purposes or too reliant on local species to support inter-regional comparisons. A new approach to this problem uses species-independent plant functional types with a wide spectrum of environmental sensitivity. By means of a rule set, plant functional types can be constructed according to specific combinations from within a generic set of 35 adaptive, morphological plant functional attributes. Each combination assumes that a vascular plant individual can be described as a "coherent" functional unit. When used together with vegetation structure, plant functional types facilitate rapid vegetation assessment that complements species-based data and makes possible uniform comparisons of vegetation response to environmental change within and between countries. Recently developed user-friendly software (VegClass) facilitates data entry and the analysis of biophysical field records from a standardized, rapid, survey pro forma. Case studies are presented at a variety of spatial scales and for vegetation types ranging from species-poor arctic tundra to intensive, multitaxa, baseline biodiversity assessments in complex, humid tropical forests. These demonstrate how such data can be rapidly acquired, analyzed, and communicated to conservation managers. Sample databases are linked to downloadable software and a training manual.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol6/iss2/art3/VegClass softwaregradsectsplant functional attributesplant functional typesrapid biodiversity assessmentvegetation classificationvegetation survey
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew N. Gillison
spellingShingle Andrew N. Gillison
A Generic, Computer-assisted Method for Rapid Vegetation Classification and Survey: Tropical and Temperate Case Studies
Ecology and Society
VegClass software
gradsects
plant functional attributes
plant functional types
rapid biodiversity assessment
vegetation classification
vegetation survey
author_facet Andrew N. Gillison
author_sort Andrew N. Gillison
title A Generic, Computer-assisted Method for Rapid Vegetation Classification and Survey: Tropical and Temperate Case Studies
title_short A Generic, Computer-assisted Method for Rapid Vegetation Classification and Survey: Tropical and Temperate Case Studies
title_full A Generic, Computer-assisted Method for Rapid Vegetation Classification and Survey: Tropical and Temperate Case Studies
title_fullStr A Generic, Computer-assisted Method for Rapid Vegetation Classification and Survey: Tropical and Temperate Case Studies
title_full_unstemmed A Generic, Computer-assisted Method for Rapid Vegetation Classification and Survey: Tropical and Temperate Case Studies
title_sort generic, computer-assisted method for rapid vegetation classification and survey: tropical and temperate case studies
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2002-12-01
description Standard methods of vegetation classification and survey tend to be either too broad for management purposes or too reliant on local species to support inter-regional comparisons. A new approach to this problem uses species-independent plant functional types with a wide spectrum of environmental sensitivity. By means of a rule set, plant functional types can be constructed according to specific combinations from within a generic set of 35 adaptive, morphological plant functional attributes. Each combination assumes that a vascular plant individual can be described as a "coherent" functional unit. When used together with vegetation structure, plant functional types facilitate rapid vegetation assessment that complements species-based data and makes possible uniform comparisons of vegetation response to environmental change within and between countries. Recently developed user-friendly software (VegClass) facilitates data entry and the analysis of biophysical field records from a standardized, rapid, survey pro forma. Case studies are presented at a variety of spatial scales and for vegetation types ranging from species-poor arctic tundra to intensive, multitaxa, baseline biodiversity assessments in complex, humid tropical forests. These demonstrate how such data can be rapidly acquired, analyzed, and communicated to conservation managers. Sample databases are linked to downloadable software and a training manual.
topic VegClass software
gradsects
plant functional attributes
plant functional types
rapid biodiversity assessment
vegetation classification
vegetation survey
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol6/iss2/art3/
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