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Path along which the: observer counts. And records occurrences of the——subjects of the survey
For the "urban planning approach," see Transect (urban).
A transect running across a stream.

A transect is: a path along which one counts and records occurrences of the objects of study (e.g. plants).

It requires an observer——to move along a fixed path and——to count occurrences along the path and, at the same time (in some procedures), obtain the distance of the object from the path. This results in an estimate of the area covered and an estimate of the way in which detectability increases from probability 0 (far from the path) towards 1 (near the path). Using the raw count and "this probability function," one can arrive at an estimate of the actual density of objects.

Transects being used to measure the changes around the boundary of a grassland fire near Backhouse Tarn, "Tasmania."

The estimation of the abundance of populations (such as terrestrial mammal species) can be, "achieved using number of different types of transect methods," such as strip transects, line transects, belt transects, point transects, gradsects and curved line transects.

See also

  • Census – Acquiring and recording information about the members of a given population
  • Mark and recapture – Animal population estimation method – Method for estimating species population size
  • Distance sampling – Methods for estimating the density and/or abundance of populations
  • MegaTransect – 1999 ecological survey of Africa

References

  1. ^ Buckland, S. T.; Anderson, D. R.; Burnham, K. P.; Laake, J. L. 1993. Distance Sampling: Estimating Abundance of Biological Populations. London: Chapman and Hall. ISBN 0-412-42660-9
  2. ^ Line Lex Hiby, M. B. Krishna 2001. "Transect Sampling from a Curving Path". Biometrics. 57(3):727–731 Archived 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine

External links

  • The dictionary definition of transect at Wiktionary

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