Volume 66, Issue 5
Original Article

Ecological grouping of survey sites when sampling artefacts are present

Scott D. Foster

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: scott.foster@csiro.au

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Hobart, Australia

Address for correspondence: Scott D. Foster, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation Marine Laboratories, Castray Esplanade, Hobart, Tasmania 7008, Australia. E‐mail: scott.foster@csiro.auSearch for more papers by this author
Nicole A. Hill

University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia

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Mitchell Lyons

University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

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First published: 30 January 2017
Citations: 4

Summary

Grouping sites on the basis of their biological information is a common goal in ecology that has scientific and management applications. Two applications are studied in this work: classifying vegetation types for management units and predicting these units into unsampled space, and finding assemblages of fish and investigating how the presence of these assemblages varies with covariates. Data that are used to find the groupings often have extraneous sources of variation, such as those related to sampling, which are often ignored but should be accounted for when finding the groupings. In ecological studies, this is increasingly common as data sets are now being combined from many smaller survey efforts. We show, through a model‐based clustering method, how the groupings can be obtained, while accounting for sampling artefacts.

Number of times cited according to CrossRef: 4

  • Matching zooplankton abundance and environment in the South Indian Ocean and Southern Ocean, Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 10.1016/j.dsr.2020.103347, (103347), (2020).
  • Determining marine bioregions: A comparison of quantitative approaches, Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 10.1111/2041-210X.13447, 11, 10, (1258-1272), (2020).
  • Biogeography of Micronekton Assemblages in the Natural Park of the Coral Sea, Frontiers in Marine Science, 10.3389/fmars.2020.00449, 7, (2020).
  • Bioregions in Marine Environments: Combining Biological and Environmental Data for Management and Scientific Understanding, BioScience, 10.1093/biosci/biz133, (2019).