Diversity and equitability ordering profiles applied to study forest structure

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Diversity and equitability ordering profiles applied to study forest structure. / Valbuena, Ruben; Packalén, Petteri; Martín-Fernández, Susana et al.
In: Forest Ecology and Management, Vol. 276, 2012, p. 185-195.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Valbuena, R, Packalén, P, Martín-Fernández, S & Maltamo, M 2012, 'Diversity and equitability ordering profiles applied to study forest structure', Forest Ecology and Management, vol. 276, pp. 185-195. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2012.03.036

APA

Valbuena, R., Packalén, P., Martín-Fernández, S., & Maltamo, M. (2012). Diversity and equitability ordering profiles applied to study forest structure. Forest Ecology and Management, 276, 185-195. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2012.03.036

CBE

Valbuena R, Packalén P, Martín-Fernández S, Maltamo M. 2012. Diversity and equitability ordering profiles applied to study forest structure. Forest Ecology and Management. 276:185-195. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2012.03.036

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Valbuena R, Packalén P, Martín-Fernández S, Maltamo M. Diversity and equitability ordering profiles applied to study forest structure. Forest Ecology and Management. 2012;276:185-195. doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2012.03.036

Author

Valbuena, Ruben ; Packalén, Petteri ; Martín-Fernández, Susana et al. / Diversity and equitability ordering profiles applied to study forest structure. In: Forest Ecology and Management. 2012 ; Vol. 276. pp. 185-195.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Diversity and equitability ordering profiles applied to study forest structure

AU - Valbuena, Ruben

AU - Packalén, Petteri

AU - Martín-Fernández, Susana

AU - Maltamo, Matti

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - This article performs an in-depth examination on whether indices of diversity and equitability among tree size classes are adequate for studying the structural complexity of forests. Diversity profiles and the intrinsic diversity ordering of several field plots were compared. Results demonstrated that even-sized stands are intrinsically non-comparable to uneven-sized stands with regard to their diversity of size classes. Indices describing the diversity of size classes are consequently inadequate, as they order forest structural types (FSTs) inconsistently. The concept of equitability, obtained when removing the richness component from entropy, seemed more adequate for this purpose. Indices of equitability among size classes provided more consistent measures, since the field plots had comparable intrinsic equitability ordering. Furthermore, ranking individual trees by their size is a better approach than ranking size classes, and therefore it is more correct to measure the inequality of tree sizes rather than equitability among size classes. A particular interpretation of Lorenz curves applies when they are used for the study of forest structures, as they should also be compared to a theoretical uniform distribution, and not just the diagonal line-of-absolute-equality. Advised indices are Gini coefficient (GC), De Camino homogeneity (CH), and structure index based on variance (STVI), as they all are consistent with the Lorenz ordering.

AB - This article performs an in-depth examination on whether indices of diversity and equitability among tree size classes are adequate for studying the structural complexity of forests. Diversity profiles and the intrinsic diversity ordering of several field plots were compared. Results demonstrated that even-sized stands are intrinsically non-comparable to uneven-sized stands with regard to their diversity of size classes. Indices describing the diversity of size classes are consequently inadequate, as they order forest structural types (FSTs) inconsistently. The concept of equitability, obtained when removing the richness component from entropy, seemed more adequate for this purpose. Indices of equitability among size classes provided more consistent measures, since the field plots had comparable intrinsic equitability ordering. Furthermore, ranking individual trees by their size is a better approach than ranking size classes, and therefore it is more correct to measure the inequality of tree sizes rather than equitability among size classes. A particular interpretation of Lorenz curves applies when they are used for the study of forest structures, as they should also be compared to a theoretical uniform distribution, and not just the diagonal line-of-absolute-equality. Advised indices are Gini coefficient (GC), De Camino homogeneity (CH), and structure index based on variance (STVI), as they all are consistent with the Lorenz ordering.

U2 - 10.1016/j.foreco.2012.03.036

DO - 10.1016/j.foreco.2012.03.036

M3 - Erthygl

VL - 276

SP - 185

EP - 195

JO - Forest Ecology and Management

JF - Forest Ecology and Management

SN - 0378-1127

ER -