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There are many books and computer programs dealing look ahead
rather than pondering the past. This is a with data analysis. It
would be easy to count at least a manual of recent views that
evolved in the study of hundred, yet few of these would show
applications in vegetation. This book is intended to emphasize the
new vegetation science. Today in the face of environmental
acquisitions which we believe significantly affect the degradation
caused by anthropogenic pressures on the future of vegetation
analysis: biosphere there is added urgency to study vegetation 1.
Vegetation is a 'fuzzy' system, it must be treated as processes and
dynamics in order to understand their role such at the set level,
where the idea ofconceptualized in regulating the water, oxygen and
the carbon cycles, in patterns must drive the research design.
relation to global warming and ozone layer depletion. It 2.
Vegetation cannot be seen only in the perspective of a is well
known that ecology was developed first in vegeta traditional
taxonomy based on the species concept; tion studies (see Acot 1989)
but after an active period character sets of ecological value must
enter into marked by intensive phytoclimatic and synecological
consideration and a hierarchical analysis of patterns studies,
vegetation science entered in a rather dormant and processes should
be the basis of comparisons. period. Other ecological disciplines
such as animal popu 3."
There are many books and computer programs dealing look ahead
rather than pondering the past. This is a with data analysis. It
would be easy to count at least a manual of recent views that
evolved in the study of hundred, yet few of these would show
applications in vegetation. This book is intended to emphasize the
new vegetation science. Today in the face of environmental
acquisitions which we believe significantly affect the degradation
caused by anthropogenic pressures on the future of vegetation
analysis: biosphere there is added urgency to study vegetation 1.
Vegetation is a 'fuzzy' system, it must be treated as processes and
dynamics in order to understand their role such at the set level,
where the idea ofconceptualized in regulating the water, oxygen and
the carbon cycles, in patterns must drive the research design.
relation to global warming and ozone layer depletion. It 2.
Vegetation cannot be seen only in the perspective of a is well
known that ecology was developed first in vegeta traditional
taxonomy based on the species concept; tion studies (see Acot 1989)
but after an active period character sets of ecological value must
enter into marked by intensive phytoclimatic and synecological
consideration and a hierarchical analysis of patterns studies,
vegetation science entered in a rather dormant and processes should
be the basis of comparisons. period. Other ecological disciplines
such as animal popu 3."
(RANKIN) of equivocation information (1-: ) and interaction
information (M). The method is described in the present paper for
I: and in a previous paper (Orloci, 1976) for M. The results
presented in this paper suggest that for Species Rank order
Information Percentage of total* species to be weighted according
to their suitability to I. M I M r M characterize isolated groups
of releves in a phytosociolo 5 7 54.15 2.31 17.97 0.82 gical table,
the equivocation information may serve as a 9 5 49.86 23.19 16.55
8.22 3 3 9 47.79 0.56 15.86 0.20 suitable weight. The appropriate
formulations are derived 6 4 8 36.18 1.18 12.01 0.42 4 5 3 24.36
59.34 8.09 21.03 and computed for some data from a salt marsh
community. 8 6 4 24.25 39.04 8.05 13.84 10 7 I 21.96 71.17 7.29
25.23 7 8 2 18.67 69.01 6.20 24.46 9 10 18.40 6.11 10 6 5.64 16.31
1.87 5.78 References Total 301.00* 282.11 * 100.00 100.00 Feoli, E.
1973. An index for weighing characters in monothetic
classifications. (Italian with English summary). Giorn. Bot. Ita '
107: 263-268. Gower, J.e. 1967. A comparison of some methods of
cluster is a monotone, increasing function of sample size if .. )."
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