Additional file 2: Figure S1. of Wetland characteristics linked to broad-scale patterns in Culiseta melanura abundance and eastern equine encephalitis virus infection
Nicholas Skaff
Philip Armstrong
Theodore Andreadis
Kendra Cheruvelil
10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3908353_D2.v1
https://springernature.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Additional_file_2_Figure_S1_of_Wetland_characteristics_linked_to_broad-scale_patterns_in_Culiseta_melanura_abundance_and_eastern_equine_encephalitis_virus_infection/5513701
Relative importance of spatial scales from 50Â m to 5000Â m for a mean number of stream connections to forested wetlands, b proportional area of emergent wetland, c proportional area of deciduous forested wetland, d proportional area of evergreen forested wetland, e proportional area of scrub/shrub wetland and f mean impervious surface coverage. Each point represents a different model explaining Cs. melanura abundance. The y-axis lists AIC scores for each model centered on the mean AIC score of all the models. A lower centered AIC score for a model suggests better performance for that spatial scale. The background color shows the interpolated relative importance of a particular spatial scale averaged across all the models included in the plot. Red bands indicate spatial scales where the explanatory variable has the highest relative importance. (DOCX 2196 kb)
2017-10-18 05:00:00
Eastern equine encephalitis virus
Wetlands
Culiseta melanura
Vegetation
Connectivity
Hydrology
Drought