Abstract

A method is proposed to partition the variation of species abundance data into independent components: pure spatial, pure environmental, spatial component of environmental influence, and undetermined. The new method uses pre—existing techniques and computer programs of canonical ordination. The intrinsic spatial component of community structure is partialled out of the species—environment relationship in order to see if the environmental control model still holds. The method is illustrated using oribatid mites in a peat blanket, forest vegetation data, and aquatic heterotrophic bacteria. In this latter example, the new method is shown to be complementary to another approach based on partial Mantel tests.

Keywords

OrdinationEcologyComponent (thermodynamics)Abundance (ecology)Spatial variabilityCommunity structureVegetation (pathology)PeatEnvironmental sciencePartition (number theory)Spatial analysisGeographyMathematicsBiologyStatisticsRemote sensing

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Publication Info

Year
1992
Type
article
Volume
73
Issue
3
Pages
1045-1055
Citations
4246
Access
Closed

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Daniel Borcard, Pierre Legendre, Pierre Drapeau (1992). Partialling out the Spatial Component of Ecological Variation. Ecology , 73 (3) , 1045-1055. https://doi.org/10.2307/1940179

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/1940179