Plot-level variability in biomass for tropical forest inventory designs

被引:5
|
作者
Picard, Nicolas [1 ]
Gamarra, Javier G. P. [1 ]
Birigazzi, Luca [1 ]
Branthomme, Anne [1 ]
机构
[1] Food & Agr Org United Nations, Forestry Dept, I-00153 Rome, Italy
关键词
Aboveground biomass; Cluster sampling; Forest inventory; Point process; Sampling design; Tropical rain forest; PATTERNS; SIZE; LAW;
D O I
10.1016/j.foreco.2018.07.052
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
The spatial distribution of biomass is key to optimize forest inventory designs to estimate forest aboveground biomass. Point process theory sets an appropriate mathematical framework to model the spatial distribution of trees, then to derive analytical expressions for the relationship between the variance of biomass in plots and the characteristics (size and shape) of plots, possibly accounting also for plot autocorrelation in biomass. Models derived from point process theory provided a better fit to data from twenty spatially homogeneous sites in tropical rain forests than the commonly used Taylor power model for biomass variance. The model CV = root omega + kappa/vertical bar A vertical bar with CV the coefficient of variation of biomass, vertical bar A vertical bar the plot area, and omega and kappa parameters to estimate, provided in particular a better fit than the power model when the range of autocorrelation in biomass was greater than the plot width. The twenty tropical forest sites greatly differed in the observed relationship between biomass variance and plot size, reflecting differences in the spatial pattern of biomass according to the fitted point process. Accordingly, optimized forest inventory designs also greatly differed between forest sites, with positive biomass autocorrelation favouring cluster sampling design with a distance between subplots in the order of the range of the biomass autocorrelation. In a spatially heterogeneous context consisting of different homogeneous forest strata, large-scale heterogeneity prevailed upon local biomass autocorrelation in determining the optimized plot size and shape. If uncontrolled through stratification, large-scale heterogeneity resulted in much smaller (approximately 0.1-0.2 ha) optimized plot sizes than the homogeneous case (approximately 1-2 ha).
引用
收藏
页码:10 / 20
页数:11
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