STATISTICAL
ANALYSIS OF THE BEAVER VALLEY WETLANDS
Nicole
Williams and Mark Ecker
In
the summer of 2003 students and faculty at the University of Northern Iowa have
been analyzing water quality in a wetlands area dominated by West Lake and
Railroad Lake just northwest of campus. A
statistical goal for West Lake and Railroad Lake was to check the two lakes for
spatial correlation, i.e., pairs of observation closer in space tend to be more
similar then pairs further apart. We
explore spatial correlation for the variables water depth, sediment depth,
dissolved oxygen, and phosphorus. Then
phosphorus concentrations can be predicted for any unsampled sites within each
lake. After inspecting empirical
variograms we find little evidence of spatial correlation.
Another goal concerning the Iowa wetlands is to run an analysis of
covariance to explore what relationship (regression) exists between the
dependent variable phosphorus and the independent variables dissolved oxygen,
water depth, and sediment depth. The
goal of this analysis is to predict the phosphorus level in either West Lake or
Railroad Lake when different levels of an independent variables are used.
We conclude that the slopes for the independent variables are all the
same, but the intercepts for West Lake and Railroad are different, i.e., West
Lake has a higher phosphorus level.
This
research was supported by the Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust and the Iowa Space
Grant Consortium.