2016
DOI: 10.1038/srep24110
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A novel approach for modelling vegetation distributions and analysing vegetation sensitivity through trait-climate relationships in China

Abstract: Increasing evidence indicates that current dynamic global vegetation models (DGVMs) have suffered from insufficient realism and are difficult to improve, particularly because they are built on plant functional type (PFT) schemes. Therefore, new approaches, such as plant trait-based methods, are urgently needed to replace PFT schemes when predicting the distribution of vegetation and investigating vegetation sensitivity. As an important direction towards constructing next-generation DGVMs based on plant functio… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…The model showed different behaviors in different sites, but expectedly consistent across species behaving in a similar functional way. These results may suggest that using functional traits combinations to provide physiological parameters, instead of fixed species-specific ones, may produce still reliable and more general predictions, particularly useful in case of larger spatial/temporal simulations [76][77][78]. Using a species-level parameterization, in fact, may result in a too-fine "resolution" because: (1) it would require excessive computational resources and a finely-detailed parameterization, usually inaccessible on a broad scale [79]; and (2) the model's rationale in predicting forest structure is mainly driven by competition for resources.…”
Section: D-cmcc-psm Uncertainty In Estimating Neementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The model showed different behaviors in different sites, but expectedly consistent across species behaving in a similar functional way. These results may suggest that using functional traits combinations to provide physiological parameters, instead of fixed species-specific ones, may produce still reliable and more general predictions, particularly useful in case of larger spatial/temporal simulations [76][77][78]. Using a species-level parameterization, in fact, may result in a too-fine "resolution" because: (1) it would require excessive computational resources and a finely-detailed parameterization, usually inaccessible on a broad scale [79]; and (2) the model's rationale in predicting forest structure is mainly driven by competition for resources.…”
Section: D-cmcc-psm Uncertainty In Estimating Neementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This relationship can be analyzed by models (Graumlich & Davis, 1993;Yang et al, 2016;Zuo et al, 2012), metrics (Peng, Mi, Qing, & Xue, 2016;Schindler, Von Wehrden, Poirazidis, Wrbka, & Kati, 2013;Sohoulande Djebou et al, 2015;Zhang, Van Coillie, De Clercq, Ou, & De Wulf, 2013), or statistical calculation (Carleton, 1984;Dias & Melo, 2010). Landscape metrics is often used to quantify vegetation pattern and spatial organization and is sensitive to scale, as are many other ecological approaches (Bekker, Clark, & Jackson, 2009;Gardner, Milne, Turnei, & O'neill, 1987;Meentemeyer & Box, 1987;Turner, O'neill, Gardner, & Milne, 1989).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gaussian functions and their combinations are widely applied in bio-statistics to describe complex distributions and classifications (for algorithm details, see Witte et al, 2007 and Yang et al, 2016). Once Gaussian density distributions are ascertained in the discriminant classification, we can easily obtain the classification probability associated with each class.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Once Gaussian density distributions are ascertained in the discriminant classification, we can easily obtain the classification probability associated with each class. A GMM is a combination of several Gaussian components that do not require any arbitrary and potentially restrictive assumptions in the form of probability density functions, and it is an effective vegetation classifier in trait-based modeling (Laughlin et al, 2015; Yang et al, 2016).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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