Personal tools
You are here: Home Resources References Overton and Stehman, 1996
Navigation
 

Overton and Stehman, 1996

Reference

Overton, W. S., and S. V. Stehman. 1996. Desireable design characteristics for long-term monitoring of ecological variables. Environmental and Ecological Statistics 3(4):349-361.

Abstract

Long-term environmental monitoring places a set of demands on a sampling strategy not present in a survey designed for a single time period.  The inevitability that a sample wil become out of date must be a dominant consideration in planning a long-term monitoring programme.  The sampling strategy must be able to accomodate periodic frame update and sample restructuring in order to address changes in the composition of the universe and changes in the perception of issues leading to new questions and concerns.  The sampling strategy must be capable of adapting to such changes while maintaining its identification as a probability sample and its capacity to detect trends that span the update occasions.  These issues are examined with respect to subpopulation estimation, post-stratification via conditioning, and sample enlargement and reduction.  Design features that involve complex sample structure create potentially serious difficulties, whereas an equal probability design permits greater adaptability and flexibility.  Structure should be employed sparingly and in awareness of its undesireable effects.


Variants

  • Overton and Stehman (1996)
Document Actions