Monitoring a Freshwater Fishpopulation: Statistical Surveillance of Biodiversity
Abstract
Statistical surveillance are methods for repeated analysis of stochastic processes, aiming to detect a change in the underlying distribution. Such methods are widely used for industrial, medical, economical and other applications. By applying these general methods on data collected for environmetrical purposes, it might be possible to detect important changes fast and reliable. We exemplify the use of statistical surveillance on a data set of fish catches in Lake MaIaren, Sweden, 1964-1993. A model for the in-control process of one species, vendace (Coregonus albula), is constructed and used for univariate monitoring. Further, we demonstrate the application of Hotelling's T2 and the Shannon-Wiener index for monitoring biodiversity, where a set of five economically interesting species serve as bioindicators for the lake.
Publisher
University of Gothenburg
Collections
View/ Open
Date
1997-02-01Author
Pettersson, Magnus
Keywords
Vendace
Recursive Residuals
Shewhart test
AR process
Fourier series
Species correlation matrix
Shannon-Wiener index
Hotelling's T2
Lake Mälaren
Catch data
Publication type
report
ISSN
0349-8034
Series/Report no.
Research Report
1997:2
Language
eng