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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B4. Istanbul 2004
3. DUALITY : FORMULATION AND ASSESSMENT
Duality hypothesis states that there is mutuality and
complementarity in the way SW and WAP of patch patterns
change and that relationships between SW and WAP represent
characteristics of the spatial processes. Relationships between
fragmentation and shape were first assessed by us with real
patch pattern data derived from processing historical air
photographs (Shoshany, 2002) made on three dates between
1956 and 1990 (Figure 1).
1956
1976
1990
Figure 1. Soil (in black) and Vegetation (in white) patches as
mapped from historical air-photographs.
561
Broadening the information basis was achieved by looking both
at soil and vegetation patch characteristics and by utilizing the
phase difference in the process between north and south facing
slopes (approximately 12 years). A hypothetical continuum of
90 years was thus formed representing the recovery process,
from almost bare terrain in 1920 (realistic assumption due to the
extensive use of wood for fuel during the Ottoman rule in
Palestine) to almost total shrub cover, which could be achieved
in 2010.
SW and WAP" indices >
B
6
4
2
0
1
920 1940 1950 1980 2000
Y eat
=
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1 i 7
t
i
SW and WAP! indices
e
i 1 i 1
1920 1940 1960 1980 2000
Year
Figure 2. Graphically generalized curves of Shannon and
Weiner Information Index (SW) with thin lines and Weighted
Area-Perimeter Index (WAPI) with bold lines: vegetation (a)
and soil (b) on south facing (broken lines) and north facing
slopes (solid lines). Represent extrapolation of data derived
from air photographs interpretation for dates between 1956 and
1990.
Figures 2a and 2b provide a graphic generalization of the
change in fragmentation and shape within this hypothetical time
frame. The WAPI and SW indices are generally inversely
related: while low WAP1 and high SW characterized the initial
spread of vegetation or the end of soil fragmentation; high
WAPI and low SW were inferred when vegetation clumped
into large patches and when the large soil clumps began to
disaggregate. In addition to representing the stages of patch
dynamics, these graphs exhibit differences in the rate of change
between slope aspects, indicating sensitivity to differences in
the types of process occurring respectively on south and north
facing slopes. Based on this data, it may be suggested that soil-
vegetation patch dynamics is embedded within the generalized
graphic 4description and it furthermore provides empirically
based support for the duality hypothesis. Further verification
and generalization of the validity of these fragmentation-shape
relationships was obtained by simulating patch pattern
dynamics.