Floristic diversity and the landscape mosiac : an analysis of the vegetation of the island of Newfoundland

Includes bibliographical references (pages [122]-130) Research directions in vegetation ecology were reviewed with emphasis on the continuum concept, phytosociology, relationships between plant guilds at the landscape level, and the lack of hypothesis testing in studies employing ordination and phyt...

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Main Author: Hudson, André J.
Other Authors: Scheiner, Samuel M., 1956-, Department of Biological Sciences
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Northern Illinois University 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/15359
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spelling ftnorthillinuni:oai:commons.lib.niu.edu:10843/15359 2023-05-15T17:21:45+02:00 Floristic diversity and the landscape mosiac : an analysis of the vegetation of the island of Newfoundland Hudson, André J. Scheiner, Samuel M., 1956- Department of Biological Sciences 1992 x, [136] pages application/pdf http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/15359 eng eng Northern Illinois University http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/15359 NIU theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from Huskie Commons for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without the written permission of the authors. Botany--Newfoundland Text Dissertation/Thesis 1992 ftnorthillinuni 2020-09-22T09:42:13Z Includes bibliographical references (pages [122]-130) Research directions in vegetation ecology were reviewed with emphasis on the continuum concept, phytosociology, relationships between plant guilds at the landscape level, and the lack of hypothesis testing in studies employing ordination and phytosociological techniques. Continued research into compositional parallels among taxonomic guilds along measured environmental gradients was suggested to address hypotheses regarding vegetation structure in landscapes. Using a data base of 1280 releves from three major vegetation types across the Island of Newfoundland, a synthesis of previous floristic analyses of the island was performed. Correspondence between previous phytosociological classifications of releves and their ordination positions was assessed using principal coordinates analysis (PCoA). Overlap in the distribution of phytosociological associations was observed within vegetation types, and to a lesser extent across vegetation types; furthermore, no statistically significant discontinuities in floristic composition (assessed using the split moving window technique) were observed within or across vegetation types. These observations were supportive of the continuum concept, and indicative of the limitations of the phytosociological approach as a foundation for ecological studies on patterning in landscapes. Pattern diversity analysis was used to compare species richness and landscape complexity between the island and other boreal North American regions. Species richness for the island was lower but landscape complexity was similar to that of other regions, indicating that conclusions drawn from this analysis have broad applicability. A basis for the identification of causes of pattern was established by investigation of compositional similarities among vascular and cryptogam plant guilds along environmental gradient complexes on the island. Three correlation techniques were used: correlation of similarity matrices, correlation of releve positions on PCoA axes, and canonical correlation of PCoA axes. Strong correlations existed between guilds within and across vegetation types. Correlations were strongest in forest dominated regions and weakest in heath. The strength of correlations increased with increasing turnover of species along gradients (& diversity). Possible directions of causation for observed relationships included determination of the composition of one guild by the control exerted on local environmental conditions by the other guild, or independent determination of the composition of both guilds by regional abiotic factors acting through local environmental conditions. M.S. (Master of Science) Thesis Newfoundland Northern Illinois University (NIU): Huskie Commons Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Northern Illinois University (NIU): Huskie Commons Repository
op_collection_id ftnorthillinuni
language English
topic Botany--Newfoundland
spellingShingle Botany--Newfoundland
Hudson, André J.
Floristic diversity and the landscape mosiac : an analysis of the vegetation of the island of Newfoundland
topic_facet Botany--Newfoundland
description Includes bibliographical references (pages [122]-130) Research directions in vegetation ecology were reviewed with emphasis on the continuum concept, phytosociology, relationships between plant guilds at the landscape level, and the lack of hypothesis testing in studies employing ordination and phytosociological techniques. Continued research into compositional parallels among taxonomic guilds along measured environmental gradients was suggested to address hypotheses regarding vegetation structure in landscapes. Using a data base of 1280 releves from three major vegetation types across the Island of Newfoundland, a synthesis of previous floristic analyses of the island was performed. Correspondence between previous phytosociological classifications of releves and their ordination positions was assessed using principal coordinates analysis (PCoA). Overlap in the distribution of phytosociological associations was observed within vegetation types, and to a lesser extent across vegetation types; furthermore, no statistically significant discontinuities in floristic composition (assessed using the split moving window technique) were observed within or across vegetation types. These observations were supportive of the continuum concept, and indicative of the limitations of the phytosociological approach as a foundation for ecological studies on patterning in landscapes. Pattern diversity analysis was used to compare species richness and landscape complexity between the island and other boreal North American regions. Species richness for the island was lower but landscape complexity was similar to that of other regions, indicating that conclusions drawn from this analysis have broad applicability. A basis for the identification of causes of pattern was established by investigation of compositional similarities among vascular and cryptogam plant guilds along environmental gradient complexes on the island. Three correlation techniques were used: correlation of similarity matrices, correlation of releve positions on PCoA axes, and canonical correlation of PCoA axes. Strong correlations existed between guilds within and across vegetation types. Correlations were strongest in forest dominated regions and weakest in heath. The strength of correlations increased with increasing turnover of species along gradients (& diversity). Possible directions of causation for observed relationships included determination of the composition of one guild by the control exerted on local environmental conditions by the other guild, or independent determination of the composition of both guilds by regional abiotic factors acting through local environmental conditions. M.S. (Master of Science)
author2 Scheiner, Samuel M., 1956-
Department of Biological Sciences
format Thesis
author Hudson, André J.
author_facet Hudson, André J.
author_sort Hudson, André J.
title Floristic diversity and the landscape mosiac : an analysis of the vegetation of the island of Newfoundland
title_short Floristic diversity and the landscape mosiac : an analysis of the vegetation of the island of Newfoundland
title_full Floristic diversity and the landscape mosiac : an analysis of the vegetation of the island of Newfoundland
title_fullStr Floristic diversity and the landscape mosiac : an analysis of the vegetation of the island of Newfoundland
title_full_unstemmed Floristic diversity and the landscape mosiac : an analysis of the vegetation of the island of Newfoundland
title_sort floristic diversity and the landscape mosiac : an analysis of the vegetation of the island of newfoundland
publisher Northern Illinois University
publishDate 1992
url http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/15359
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/15359
op_rights NIU theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from Huskie Commons for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without the written permission of the authors.
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