Blog Post 4: Sampling Strategies

The virtual forest sampling theory exercise provided insight into the advantages and disadvantages of the different sampling techniques you can use in the field.

I have provided a summary of my findings in table 1 below.

Overall, the Systematic: Sampling along a topographic gradient technique had the fastest sampling time.

The two most common species were the Eastern Hemlock and the Sweet Birch. In general, the percentage error was much lower in the common species versus the two most rare species, Striped Maple and White Pine, which had a percentage error of 100% in some cases, meaning it was not sampled at all. This suggests that sampling accuracy increases with species abundance.

Overall, when adding up the percentage error calculations, the Random Sampling (sampling technique # 2) was more accurate than the systematic topographic and the haphazard sampling techniques.

 

Table 1. Sampling techniques using the Virtual Forest Exercise
Species Measures Actual data(systematic topographic) data (random) data (area haphazard) % error calculations (Topographic) % error calculations (Random) % error calculations (Haphazard)
Eastern Hemlock (common) Density 469.9 520 437.5 536 10.7 6.9 14.1
Frequency 73.00% 80.00% 79.00% 76.00% 9.6 8.2 4.1
Dominance 33.3 40.2 40.5 38.2 20.7 21.6 14.7
Relative Density 50.6 53.3 47.3 56.8 5.3 6.5 12.3
Relative Frequency 33.8 37.7 36.4 33.3 11.5 7.7 1.5
Relative Dominance 44.4 50.4 48 50.9 13.5 8.1 14.6
Importance Value 42.9 47.1 43.9 47 9.8 2.3 9.6
Morisita Index 1.89 1.76 1.96 1.86 6.9 3.7 1.6
Sweet Birch (common) Density 117.5 124 100 128 5.5 14.9 8.9
Frequency 43.00% 36.00% 42.00% 48.00% 16.3 2.3 11.6
Dominance 20.2 22.1 18.2 22.1 9.4 9.9 9.4
Relative Density 12.7 12.7 10.8 13.6 0 15.0 7.1
Relative Frequency 19.9 17 19.4 21.1 14.6 2.5 6.0
Relative Dominance 26.9 27.7 21.6 29.4 3.0 19.7 9.3
Importance Value 19.8 19.1 17.3 21.3 3.5 12.6 7.6
Morisita Index 2.27 2.96 2.43 1.71 30.4 7.0 24.7
Striped Maple (rare) Density 17.5 0 4.2 28 100 76.0 60.0
Frequency 6.00% 0.00% 4.00% 12.00% 100 33.3 100.0
Dominance 0.7 0 0.1 2.2 100 85.7 214.3
Relative Density 1.9 0 0.5 3 100 73.7 57.9
Relative Frequency 2.8 0 1.8 5.3 100 35.7 89.3
Relative Dominance 0.9 0 0.1 3 100 88.9 233.3
Importance Value 1.8 0 0.8 3.7 100 55.6 105.6
Morisita Index 17 ** ** 8.33 NA NA 51.0
White Pine (rare) Density 8.4 4 8.3 0 52.4 1.2 100.0
Frequency 4.00% 4.00% 4.00% 0.00% 0 0 100.0
Dominance 0.9 0.2 0.3 0 77.8 66.7 100.0
Relative Density 0.9 0.4 0.9 0 55.6 0.0 100.0
Relative Frequency 1.9 1.9 1.8 0 0 5.3 100.0
Relative Dominance 1.2 0.3 0.3 0 75 75.0 100.0
Importance Value 1.3 0.9 1 0 30.8 23.1 100.0
Morisita Index 16.13 ** 24 ** NA 48.79 NA
Shannon-Weiner Diversity 1.5 1.3 1.4 1.3
Estimated time to sample 12 hours, 38 minutes 12 hours, 43 minutes 13 hours, 1 minutes

One thought to “Blog Post 4: Sampling Strategies”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *