Focus:

note

Sites are also Samples.

Sites are also Samples.

Information model

Site, Transect and Quadrat are subclasses of Sample. Observations and Samplings refer to the proximate feature of interest with path chains of is-sample-of relationships to the Site (ultimate-feature-of-interest). Observations and Samplings can also reach the Site via the Site Visit.

Key points

Scenarios

  1. The AusPlots Rangelands' Surveillance protocol samples multiple horizontal and vertical transects across a plot. Observations are made along these transects.

  2. Plots established by the University of Sydney dataset contain plots with subplots and those subplots contain quadrats.

  3. The North Australian Tropical Transect (NATT) is a 1000 km long transect in the Northern Territory where core plots along the transect are monitored.

Scenario 1: Worked example for AusPlots Surveillance protocol

Survey protocol

Data

Application

An example of a modal window in EcoPlots UI:

note

See also the in-development UI at https://ecoplots-test.tern.org.au

See also the in-development UI at https://ecoplots-test.tern.org.au

A similar pattern of displaying observations and measurements data by AgReFed (CeRDI)

Soil sampling locations are displayed on an interactive map as purple circles. Clicking on a purple circle opens up a popup displaying the different specimens collected at the sampling location with a link to the observations for each specimen.

See https://www.agrefed.org.au/CSIRONationalSoilSiteDB#

Clicking on the view observations link displays a data table of observations within a modal.

The modal displays contextual information such as the feature of interest of these observations (Sampled Soil feature). The “parent sample” of the soil specimen is the Sampled horizon. Sample depth is an attribute of the sampling. The data table contains the observations on the soil specimen. In this case, the properties of pH and EC were observed.

Scenario 2: Worked example for University of Sydney survey data

Survey protocol

Data

Scenario 3: Worked example for observations made within a plot along the NATT

Survey protocol

Data

The ultimate feature-of-interest can always be found by stopping on the is-sample-of chain individual who is the same as the site of the Site Visit.

Reference

  1. Spatial Sampling Features: https://confluence.csiro.au/display/seegrid/Observations+and+Sampling#ObservationsandSampling-Samplingfeaturesclassifiedbyshape