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Journal ArticleDOI

A comparative study of reciprocal averaging and other ordination techniques

Hugh G. Gauch, +2 more
- 01 Mar 1977 - 
- Vol. 65, Iss: 1, pp 157-174
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TLDR
Comparison of ordination performance of reciprocal averaging with non-standardized and standardized principal components analysis (PCA) and polar or Bray-Curtis ordination (PO) found that RA is much superior to PCA at high beta diversities and on the whole preferable toPCA at low Beta diversities.
Abstract
SUMMARY Reciprocal averaging is a technique of indirect ordination, related both to weighted averages and to principal components analysis and other eigenvector techniques. A series of tests with simulated community gradients (coenoclines), simulated community patterns (coenoplanes), and sets of vegetation samples was used to compare ordination performance of reciprocal averaging (RA) with non-standardized and standardized principal components analysis (PCA) and polar or Bray-Curtis ordination (PO). Of these, non-standardized PCA is most vulnerable to effects of beta diversity, giving distorted ordinations of sample sets with three or more half-changes. PO and RA give good ordinations to five or more half-changes, and standardized PCA is intermediate. Sample errors affect all these techniques more at low than at high beta diversity, but PCA is most vulnerable to effects of sample errors. All three techniques could ordinate well a small (1-5 x 1-5 half-changes) simulated community pattern; and PO and RA could ordinate larger patterns (4 5 x 4-5 half-changes) well. PCA distorts larger community patterns into complex surfaces. Given a rectangular pattern (1-5 x 4-5 halfchanges), RA distorts the major axis of sample variation into an arch in the second axis of ordination. Clusters of samples tend to distort PCA ordinations in rather unpredictable ways, but they have smaller effects on RA, and none on PO. Outlier samples do not affect PO (unless used as endpoints), but can cause marked deterioration in RA and PCA ordinations. RA and PO are little subject to the involution of axis extremes that affects nonstandardized PCA. Despite the arch effect, RA is much superior to PCA at high beta diversities and on the whole preferable to PCA at low beta diversities. Second and higher axes of PCA and RA may express ecologically meaningless, curvilinear functions of lower axes. When curvilinear displacements are combined with sample error, axis interpretation is difficult. None of the techniques solves all the problems for ordination that result from the curvilinear relationships characteristic of community data. For applied ordination research consideration of sample set properties, careful use of supporting information to evaluate axes, and comparison of results of RA or PCA with PO and direct ordination are suggested.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The distribution and abundance of herbaceous angiosperms in west-central Florida marshes

TL;DR: Cluster analysis, reciprocal averaging and a biotic boundary technique were used to analyze the relationship between community composition and topographic depth within 4 grass-sedge marshes in west-central Florida as mentioned in this paper.
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Interpreting ecological patterns in an intact estuary, South-west New Zealand World Heritage Area

TL;DR: In this article, the salinity of the Hapuka estuary in south Westland, New Zealand has been studied using quadrat analysis. But the results were limited to a small (11 ha) but unmodified (40 km2) catchment in the South-west New Zealand World Heritage Area.
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Long-Term Monitoring of Macroinvertebrate Communities Over 2,300 km of the Murray River Reveals Ecological Signs of Salinity Mitigation Against a Backdrop of Climate Variability

TL;DR: This article investigated the ecological effects of salinity mitigation strategies in the Murray-Darling Basin (MDB) using macroinvertebrate data collected over 2,300 km of the Murray River between 1980 and 2012.
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Forest Composition on the Lake Erie Islands

TL;DR: The forest communities of the Lake Erie Island archipelago were analyzed for species composition, relationships to environmental factors and similarity to mainland forests.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution and measurement of species diversity

Robert H. Whittaker
- 01 May 1972 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Some distance properties of latent root and vector methods used in multivariate analysis

John C. Gower
- 01 Dec 1966 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derived necessary and sufficient conditions for a solution to exist in real Euclidean space for a multivariate multivariate sample of size n as points P1, P2,..., PI in a Euclidian space and discussed the interpretation of the distance A(Pi, Pj) between the ith and jth members of the sample.