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Geospatial techniques for developing a sampling frame of watersheds across a region
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Citations
19
References
2004
Year
Unknown Venue
Fishery AssessmentEngineeringGeomorphologyEarth ScienceSocial SciencesCurrent Land-management DecisionsCatchment ScaleWatershed ManagementWatershed HydrologyFishery ManagementSampling FrameStatisticsRiver Basin ManagementGeospatial TechniquesFishery ScienceGeographyFreshwater EcosystemHydrologyWater ResourcesNatural Resource ManagementWestern OregonStatistical Scope
Current land-management decisions that affect the persistence of native salmonids are often influenced by studies of individual sites that are selected based on judgment and convenience. Although this approach is useful for some purposes, extrapolating results to areas that were not sampled is statistically inappropriate because the sampling design is usually biased. Therefore, in recent investigations of coastal cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarki clarki) located above natural barriers to anadromous salmonids, we used a methodology for extending the statistical scope of inference. The purpose of this paper is to apply geospatial tools to identify a population of watersheds and develop a probability-based sampling design for coastal cutthroat trout in western Oregon, USA. The population of mid-size watersheds (500-5800 ha) west
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