Publication | Closed Access
Spatial Partitioning of Environmental Correlates of Avian Biodiversity in the Conterminous United States
88
Citations
38
References
1996
Year
Pattern MetricsBiodiversityWildlife EcologyBiogeographySpatial PartitioningEcological ModellingForestryGeographyEnvironmental CorrelatesBird SpeciesSocial SciencesConterminous United StatesSpatial EcologySpecie Distribution
Classification and regression tree (CART) analysis was used to create hierarchically organized models of the distribution of bird species richness across the conterminous United States. Species richness data were taken from the Breeding Bird Survey and were related to climatic and land use data. We were available to the independent variables, yielding an /?2-type goodness of fit metric of 47.5% deviance explained. The resulting model recognized eleven groups of hexagons, with species richness within each group determined by unique sequences of hierarchically constrained independent variables. Within the hierarchy, climate data accounted for more variability in the bird data, followed by land cover proportion, and then pattern metrics. The model was then used to predict species richness in all 12,500 hexagons of the conterminous United States yielding a map of the distribution of these eleven classes of bird species richness as determined by the environmental correlates. The potential for using this technique to interface biogeographic theory with the hierarchy theory of ecology is discussed.
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