Measuring Plant Frequency: Rangeland & Riparian Habitat Assessment 1
Measuring Plant Frequency: Rangeland & Riparian Habitat Assessment 1
I.
II.
III.
Advantages:
A. High repeatability can be obtained.
B. Fast and easy to measure.
C. Frequency of rooted plants is less sensitive to fluctuations in climatic and biotic
influences; especially for perennial vegetation.
D. Can describe distribution of species in a community.
IV.
Limitations:
A. Frequency is highly influenced by the size and shape of the quadrats used.
B. Highly sensitive to changes resulting from seedling establishment.
C. Sensitive to abundance and changes in pattern of distribution in the sampled area.
D. Frequency cannot tell which parameter has changed: canopy, cover, density or pattern
of distribution.
E. Hard to interpret frequency data due to no definite relationship between frequency and
density for non randomly distributed plant population.
V.
2.
3.
B. Rooted Frequency - the plant of interest must be rooted inside the sample plot in order
to be counted. This is the most commonly recorded measure of frequency.
C. Shoot Frequency - any runners, shoots, leaves, and/or overhang, etc. that lie inside
the plot allows the plant to be counted.
VI.
Herb layer
01-.0 m2
1-2 m2
4 m2
10 m2
Trees
100 m2
1 m2
(1x1 m or 2 x m)
D. There is a math equation to help determine size of plot using a logarithmic relationship
between frequency and density (refer to Bohnam 1989).
E. 25 plots randomly located or 25 randomly located transects should give satisfactory
results within a homogeneous plant community.
F. If frequency is 100% for the plant species in interest, reduce the frame size
(Daubenmire 1969).
G. If plant species of interest is not present in most of the samples taken, increase plot
size.
VIII.
2.
3. For example. If 200 plots were examined and Festuca idahoensis occurred in 34 of
the plots then, % Frequency of Festuca is 17% = (34 200) 100
C. Nested Plots
Look at data to see which plot size most appropriately estimates each important
species. The advantage of this technique is that one does not need to determine in
advance which plot size is going to best represent each species.
2.