Functional grouping and establishment of distribution patterns of invasive plants in China using self-organizing maps and indicator species analysis
Functional grouping and establishment of distribution patterns of invasive plants in China using self-organizing maps and indicator species analysis
Blog Article
In the present study, we introduce two techniques - self-organizing maps (SOM) and indicator species analysis (INDVAL) - for understanding the richness patterns of invasive species.We first employed SOM to identify functional groups and then used INDVAL to identify the representative areas characterizing these functional groups.Quantitative traits and distributional information on 127 invasive plants in 28 laguna 3hp dust collector provinces of China were collected to form the matrices for our study.
The results indicate Jiangsu to be the top province with the highest number of invasive species, while Ningxia was the lowest.Six functional groups were identified by the SOM hobbit door for sale method, and five of them were found to have significantly representative provinces by the INDVAL method.Our study represents the first attempt to combine self-organizing maps and indicator species analysis to assess the macro-scale distribution of exotic species.