SIMPLE CONNECTIVITY MEASURES IN SPATIAL ECOLOGY
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Abstract
Connectivity is a fundamental concept that is widely utilized in spatial ecology. The majority of connectivity measures used in the recent ecological literature only consider the nearest neighbor patch/population, or patches within a limited neighborhood of the focal patch (a buffer). Meta-analysis suggests that studies using nearest neighbor connectivity measures are much less likely to find statistically significant effects of connectivity than studies that use more complex measures. Here we compare simple connectivity measures in their ability to predict colonization events in two large and good-quality empirical data sets. The nearest neighbor distance to an occupied patch is found to be an inferior…
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Topics
Keywords
- k-nearest neighbors algorithm
- Ecology
- Measure (data warehouse)
- Spatial ecology
- Simple (philosophy)
- Computer science
- Population
- Statistics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- No poverty
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