1989
DOI: 10.1007/bf00036510
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An analysis of epiphytic lichen communities in Tasmanian cool temperate rainforest

Abstract: A three-dimensional compositional pattern in the epiphytic lichen vegetation in Tasmanian cool temperate rainforest is demonstrated using the robust ordination technique, hybrid multidimensional scaling (HMDS). The first two dimensions are correlated with the age of the host tree (and the concomitant change in bark texture) and wetness of the substrate. No measured environmental variable is related to the third dimension, which is tentatively attributed to a gradient in the constancy of the microclimate. Patte… Show more

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Cited by 135 publications
(77 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
(49 reference statements)
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“…As with production estimates, we tested for significance at a 5 0.10. We performed vector fitting (Faith and Norris 1989;Kantvilas and Minchin 1989) to examine correlations between macroinvertebrate community composition and the following potential explanatory variables: amphibian (pre-decline 5 1, post-decline 5 0); amounts of CPOM, FPOM, VFPOM, and total BOM (monthly standing stock values); and net primary production (NPP). We used the DECODA software package (Minchin 1989) for ordination, ANOSIM, and vector fitting procedures.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As with production estimates, we tested for significance at a 5 0.10. We performed vector fitting (Faith and Norris 1989;Kantvilas and Minchin 1989) to examine correlations between macroinvertebrate community composition and the following potential explanatory variables: amphibian (pre-decline 5 1, post-decline 5 0); amounts of CPOM, FPOM, VFPOM, and total BOM (monthly standing stock values); and net primary production (NPP). We used the DECODA software package (Minchin 1989) for ordination, ANOSIM, and vector fitting procedures.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the early 1980s Tasmanian lichens have been the fruitful province of Gintaras Kantvilas, who has made a productive and sustained contribution to our understanding of the lichen mycobiota of that region (Kantvilas 1983(Kantvilas , 1987(Kantvilas , 1988a(Kantvilas -c, 1989a(Kantvilas ,b, 1990a(Kantvilas -c, 1991(Kantvilas , 1992a(Kantvilas ,b, 1993(Kantvilas , 1994a(Kantvilas -d, 1995(Kantvilas , 1996a(Kantvilas -c, 1998a(Kantvilas ,b, 1999(Kantvilas , 2000a(Kantvilas ,b, 2001(Kantvilas , 2002a(Kantvilas ,b, 2004a(Kantvilas -m, 2006a(Kantvilas ,b, 2008aHenssen & Kantvilas 1985Kantvilas et al 1985Petersen & Kantvilas 1986;Kantvilas & Elix 1987Kantvilas & James 1987Kantvilas & Jarman 1988Kantvilas & Vězda 1988Kantvilas & Minchin 1989;Ratkowksy et al 1989;Kantvilas & Seppelt 1992Kantvilas & wedin 1992;McCarthy & Kantvilas 1993a,b, 1997Kantvilas & Thor 1993;Pusswald et al 1994;Kantvilas & Coppins 1997;Kantvilas & Jørgensen 1998;Coppins & Kantvilas 2001;Kantvilas & Louwhoff 2004Printzen & Kantvilas 2004).…”
Section: Antarcticamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We set up 100 runs with random starting configurations, up to 250 iterations per run, and a stability criterion of 0.0001. We used the best NMDS solution in a vectorfitting procedure (Kantvilas and Minchin, 1989) with up to 10,000 unique random permutations to determine the maximum correlation (R max ) of each biomarker to the final NMDS ordination in DECODA.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%