4.7 Article

Spatial pattern analysis of line-segment data in ecology

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 103, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3597

Keywords

course woody debris; fiber processes; forest ecology; line segment; point pattern; Ripley's K; stochastic geometry; tree fall

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [FL160100101]
  2. Australian Research Council [FL160100101] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The spatial analysis of linear features in ecology is a challenging and rarely attempted problem, with existing methods often being abstract and difficult to apply. This study introduces a concrete method for analyzing spatial patterning of line-segment data, which was validated using fallen tree data from Australian tall eucalypt forest plots.
The spatial analysis of linear features (lines and curves) is a challenging and rarely attempted problem in ecology. Existing methods are typically expressed in abstract mathematical formalism, making it difficult to assess their relevance and transferability into an ecological setting. We introduce a set of concrete and accessible methods to analyze the spatial patterning of line-segment data. The methods include Monte Carlo techniques based on a new generalization of Ripley's K-function and a class of line-segment processes that can be used to specify parametric models: parameters are estimated using maximum likelihood and models compared using information-theoretic principles. We apply the new methods to fallen tree (dead log) data collected from two 1-ha Australian tall eucalypt forest plots. Our results show that the spatial pattern of the fallen logs is best explained by plot-level spatial heterogeneity in combination with a slope-dependent nonuniform distribution of fallen-log orientations. These methods are of a general nature and are applicable to any line-segment data. In the context of forest ecology, the integration of fallen logs as linear structural features in a landscape with the point locations of living trees, and a quantification of their interactions, can yield new insights into the functional and structural role of tree fall in forest communities and their enduring post-mortem ecological legacy as spatially distributed decomposing logs.

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