A geostatistical approach to cork production sampling estimation in Quercus suber forests
The estimation of cork production in cork oak (Quercus suber L.) forests is complex because of the high heterogeneity of stripped surface distribution (the variable used to quantify cork production) and the importance of cork thickness estimation as a determining factor of cork quality. In this study, the different sources of variation in stripped surface (S̄d) estimation and the effects of the spatial structure of the variance were analysed. When indicator kriging was used to determine the cork productive area, ordinary kriging and kriging with measurement errors gave better estimations of S̄d (ordinary block kriging estimation of 156.16 m 2/ha and standard errors (SE) of 16.40 and 15.7 m2/ha, respectively) than the design-based approach for the whole forest area (66.37 m2/ha, SE = 11.34 m2/ha). The SE lying in the second-stage design was 4.93 m2/ha. The ordinary kriging prediction of cork thickness using an XY(λZ) variogram, where λ is the anisotropy coefficient of the Z axis, gives a smaller SE and less bias than the kriging prediction with the XY variogram (for a mean estimation of 21.91 mm, SE = 3.90 and 4.16 mm, respectively, and sum of errors of 0.42 and 0.85 respectively). © 2005 NRC.
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | journal article biblioteca |
Language: | eng |
Published: |
2005
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/2948 |
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