Graph theoretical methods for comparing phytosociological structures

This paper describes some methods that can be used to compare the phytosociological structure of plant communities using some graph theoretic properties of the directed graphs that represent them. In such a graph, the species are represented by points and the association of species A with species B is represented by a directed line segment going from B to A. Two communities can be compared using simple indices to measure the similarity of their species-lists (point similarity) and of the species associations in them (line similarity). A more sophisticated and informative measure of line similarity is the probability that, given the number of points shared by two graphs, they have at least as many lines in common as they are observed to have. A formula for calculating that probability is given here. The graphs of community structure can also be compared with respect to the homogeneity of the distribution of the lines among the points, a property related to the number of species that are important in determining the composition of the community. These techniques are illustrated using the graphs of the phytosociological structure of intertidal seaweed communities on the southeast coast of Nova Scotia.