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Journal of Vegetation Science
Table of Contents
Issue 15.6, December
Abstract

 This is a Opulus Open Access article free for all visitors


Effect of error in the DEM on environmental variables for predictive vegetation modelling

Question: Predictive vegetation modelling relies on the use of environmental variables, which are usually derived from a base data set with some level of error, and this error is propagated to any subsequently derived environmental variables. The question for this study is: What is the level of error and uncertainty in environmental variables based on the error propagated from a Digital Elevation Model (DEM) and how does it vary for both direct and indirect variables?

Location: Kioloa region, New South Wales, Australia.

Methods: The level of error in a DEM is assessed and used to develop an error model for analysing error propagation to derived environmental variables. We tested both indirect (elevation, slope, aspect, topographic position) and direct (average air temperature, net solar radiation, and topographic wetness index) variables for their robustness to propagated error from the DEM.

Results: It is shown that the direct environmental variable net solar radiation is less affected by error in the DEM than the indirect variables aspect and slope, but that regional conditions such as slope steepness and cloudiness can influence this outcome. However, the indirect environmental variable topographic position was less affected by error in the DEM than topographic wetness index. Interestingly, the results disagreed with the current assumption that indirect variables are necessarily less sensitive to propagated error because they are less derived.

Conclusions: The results indicate that variables exhibit both systematic bias and instability under uncertainty. There is a clear need to consider the sensitivity of variables to error in their base data sets in addition to the question of whether to use direct or indirect variables.

pp. 747-756

doi:

Published 01 December 2004

Van Niel, K.P.; Laffan, S.W. & Lees, B.G.

Keywords: Air temperature; Aspect; DEM; Environmental modelling: Niche modelling; Slope; Topographic position; Topographic Wetness Index.








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