1 / 14

49th Annual Conference of the IAVS

49th Annual Conference of the IAVS. Large scale mapping of soil pH by plant presence/absence bioindication. J.C. Gégout, C. Piedallu, I. Seynave, J.C. Hervé AgroParisTech - INRA - IFN. The need of nutritional direct variables for plant distribution modelling.

clove
Download Presentation

49th Annual Conference of the IAVS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 49th Annual Conference of the IAVS Large scale mapping of soil pH by plant presence/absence bioindication J.C. Gégout, C. Piedallu, I.Seynave, J.C. Hervé AgroParisTech - INRA - IFN

  2. The need of nutritional direct variables for plant distribution modelling • Plant distribution models are built with climatic variables and sometimes with proxies of soil resources (soil types, geology) • Nutritional variables are of major importance to plant growth and distribution • Measures of soil variables are expensive. Thus, it is difficult to gather enough measurements to make accurate maps • Is plant species bioindication useful to map nutritional soil resources ?

  3. French National Forest Inventory (IFN) Systematic sampling in forests 88 004 floristic relevés without pH measures Data EcoPlant 3 835 floristic relevés with pH measures

  4. Indicator value Response curve Pres/abs 1 1 0 0 IV Ecological variable Ecological variable EcoPlant Indicator values Response curve IV for 568 frequent plant species

  5. 8.3 0.3 0.2 6.5 5.7 3.0 0.1 6.2 0 4.0 4.9 5.9 6.9 7.9 pH Predicted pH : 6.0 Dryopteris filix-mas Melica uniflora Sambucus nigra Predicted value : mean of species IV Ellenberg (1974), ter Braak & Barendregt (1986) Bioindication with IV

  6. 88 004IFN plots with floristic inventory Mean of IV on each plot 88 004IFN plots + pH_IV pH prediction on IFN plots

  7. IDW Interpolation pH classes 3.0 - 3.5 3.5 - 4.0 4.0 - 4.5 4.5 - 5.0 5.0 - 5.5 5.5 - 6.0 6.0 - 6.5 6.5 - 7.0 7.0 - 7.5 7.5 - 8.0 8.0 - 8.5 lack of data 0 500 kms pH mapping

  8. Measure of prediction errorsR2REQM =  (1/N * (X - X2) ^ 8 7 Measured pH 6 5 4 3 3 4 5 6 7 8 Mapped pH R2 = 0.56, REQM = 0.82 Map validation 261 validation plots on a grid of 16 x 16 kms Representative of French Forest

  9. Principle A few expensive relevés with measures of variables to establish plant IV A lot of cheap relevés without measures to map variables Step Sampling Plots nb Plots variables Indicator value Plant species & measured variables Stratified according to x few Mapping Plant species Systematic large Map quality Systematic few Plant species & measured variables Variables mapping by bioindication

  10. The databases « IV », « mapping » and « quality » are constructed Acidity (pH) It is now easy to build up new maps of resources with other EcoPlant IV Nitrogen avail. (C/N) A generalisable method Towards new distribution models integrating both climate and soil direct variables IFN establish 7 000 - 10 000 new plots/year -> Increase of map resolution -> Possibility of monitoring by comparing maps of different periods

  11. Thank you !

  12. Comparison of pH and C/N Maps

  13. Validation data (88 004 plots) Nutritional and climatic model Présence Absence Climatic model Map of the potential distribution of Acer campestre Climatic model, success: 54 % Nutritional and climatic model, success: 73 %

  14. Map of the Beech potential productivity

More Related