Sunday, December 14, 2025

FACTORS OF SWAMP SPATIAL DISTRIBUTIONS

 Regular readers of Swamp Things (both of you) may recall a post a few months back on The Factors of Swamp Formation. In it I applied the factorial conceptual model first developed in soil science and later applied in many other fields (especially ecology) to swamps and other wetlands. The follow-up was just published in the journal Hydrology. I initially submitted it with the "factors of swamp formation" title to resonate with the well-known factors of soil formation concept. However, reviewers pointed out, correctly, that the work deals more with spatial patterns and geographical distributions than with formation. 

The abstract is below:

Abstract


A state factor model of bottomland hardwood swamp formation is applied to a lower coastal

plain river in North Carolina, U.S., to explain variations in wetland hydrological, ecological,

geomorphological, and soil characteristics. Swamps and wetlands are a function of the

interacting influences of the state factors of climate, topography, hydrology, vegetation,

fauna, soils, geomorphic setting, and time. Five classifications of swamp and related

environments were applied to the study area, with the categories present determined

based on fieldwork. For each classification, the implicit, embedded state factors were

identified from the classification scheme itself. Relevant environmental gradients for the

study area were identified, and a spatial adjacency graph for the study area was developed

for each classification. The ability of the environmental gradients to explain the spatial

complexity of the pattern was assessed using spatial adjacency graph (SAG) analysis. All

the classification criteria are associated with the proposed state factors. SAG analysis

shows overdetermination, indicating that known gradients of causal factors are sufficient to

explain the overall pattern of spatial contiguity and that single-factor models of change are

not sufficient at the local scale. Results confirm studies showing that responses to seilla-level

and other changes are spatially patchy.


The article is open access, and you can get it via the link embedded in the citation:


Phillips, J.D. 2025 The factors of swamp spatial distributions. Hydrology 12, 332. https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrology12120332


Below, just for the heck of it, a couple of pictures from a recent paddling expedition on some anabranches and lakes of the Little Pee River, South Carolina. Though it's a bit hard to pick out at first, the top one shows a swamp tupelo (Nyssa biflora) growing right up on the root crowns of two large baldcypress (Taxodium distichum). The bottom photo is one of many cool looking cypress trees in the area. 







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FACTORS OF SWAMP SPATIAL DISTRIBUTIONS

  Regular readers of Swamp Things (both of you) may recall a post a few months back on The Factors of Swamp Formation.   In it I applied the...