Environmental Engineering Reference
In-Depth Information
52. O'Brien D, Manseau M, Fall A, Fortin M-J (2006) Testing the importance of spatial
configuration of winter habitat for woodland caribou: An application of graph theory. Biol
Conserv 130:70-83
53. BĀ“lisle M, Desrochers A, Fortin M-J (2001) Influence of forest cover on the movements of
forest birds: a homing experiment. Ecology 82:1893-1904
54. Fahrig L, Merriam G (1985) Habitat patch connectivity and population survival. Ecology
66:1762-1768
55. Bohonak AJ (1999) Dispersal, gene flow, and population structure. Q Rev Biol 74:21-45
56. Dale MRT, Dixon P, Fortin M-J et al (2002) Conceptual and mathematical relationships
among methods for spatial analysis. Ecography 25:558-577
57. Gustafason EJ (1998) Quantifying landscape spatial pattern: what is state of the art?
Ecosystems 1:143-156
58. Cushman SA, McGarigal K (2008) Landscape metrics, scales of resolution. In: von Gadow K,
Pukkala T (eds) Designing green landscapes. Springer, New York, pp 33-52
59. Cressie NA (1993) Statistics for spatial data. Wiley, New York
60. Burrough PA, McDonnell RA (1998) Principles of geographical information systems. Oxford
University Press, Oxford
61. Candau J-N, Fleming R (2005) Landscape-scale spatial distribution of spruce budworm
defoliation in relation to bioclimatic conditions. Can J Forest Res 35:2218-2232
62. Wolter PT, White MA (2002) Recent forest cover type transitions and landscape structural
changes in northeast Minnesota, USA. Landscape Ecol 17:133-155
63. Didion M, Fortin M-J, Fall A (2007) Forest age structure as indicator of boreal forest
sustainability under alternative management and fire regimes: a landscape level sensitivity
analysis. Ecol Model 200:45-58
64. Townsend PA, Foster JR, Chastain RA, Currie WS (2003) Application of imaging spectros-
copy to mapping canopy nitrogen in the forests of the central Appalachian mountains using
Hyperion and AVIRIS. IEEE Trans Geosci Remote Sens 41:1347-1354
65. Wotton BM, Martell DL (2005) A lightning fire occurrence model for Ontario. Can J Forest
Res 35:1389-1401
66. Legendre P, Fortin M-J (1989) Spatial pattern and ecological analysis. Vegetatio 80:107-138
67. Dale MRT (1999) Spatial pattern analysis in plant ecology. Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge
68. Illian J, Penttinen A, Stoyan H, Stoyan D (2008) Statistical analysis and modelling of spatial
point patterns. Wiley-Interscience, Chichester
69. Baddeley AJ, Moller J, Waagepetersen R (2000) Non-and semi-parametric estimation of
interaction in inhomogeneous point patterns. Statistica Neerlandica 54:329-350
70. Wiegand T, Moloney KA (2004) Rings, circles and null-models for point pattern analysis in
ecology. Oikos 104:209-229
71. Fortin M-J, Dale MRT, Bertazzon S (2010) Spatial analysis of wildlife distribution and
disease spread. In: Huettmann F, Cushman SA (eds) Spatial complexity, informatics, and
wildlife conservation. Springer, New York, pp 255-273
72. Ripley BD (1976) The second order analysis of stationary point processes. J Appl Probab
13:255-266
73. Lynch HJ, Moorcroft PR (2008) A spatiotemporal Ripley's K-function to analyze
interactions between spruce budworm and fire in British Columbia, Canada. Can J Forest
Res 38:3112-3119
74. James PMA, Fleming RA, Fortin M-J (2010) Identifying significant scale-specific spatial
boundaries using wavelets and null models: spruce budworm defoliation in Ontario, Canada
as a case study. Landscape Ecol 25:873-887
75. Holling CS (1992) Cross-scale morphology, geometry, and dynamics of ecosystems. Ecol
Monogr 62:447-502
76. Gardner RH (1998) Pattern, Process, and the Analysis of Spatial Scales. In: Peterson DL,
Parker VT (eds) Ecological scale. Columbia University Press, New York, pp 17-34
Search WWH ::




Custom Search