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Dive into the research topics where Wendy Jane Fjellstad is active.

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Featured researches published by Wendy Jane Fjellstad.


Landscape Ecology | 2006

Scale-dependent importance of environment, land use and landscape structure for species richness and composition of SE Norwegian modern agricultural landscapes

Rune Halvorsen Økland; Harald Bratli; Wenche Dramstad; Anette Edvardsen; Gunnar Engan; Wendy Jane Fjellstad; Einar Heegaard; Oddvar Pedersen; Heidi Solstad

Knowledge of variation in vascular plant species richness and species composition in modern agricultural landscapes is important for appropriate biodiversity management. From species lists for 2201 land-type patches in 16 1-km2 plots five data sets differing in sampling-unit size from patch to plot were prepared. Variation in each data set was partitioned into seven sources: patch geometry, patch type, geographic location, plot affiliation, habitat diversity, ecological factors, and land-use intensity. Patch species richness was highly predictable (75% of variance explained) by patch area, within-patch heterogeneity and patch type. Plot species richness was, however, not predictable by any explanatory variable, most likely because all studied landscapes contained all main patch types – ploughed land, woodland, grassland and other open land – and hence had a large core of common species. Patch species composition was explained by variation along major environmental complex gradients but appeared nested to lower degrees in modern than in traditional agricultural landscapes because species-poor parts of the landscape do not contain well-defined subsets of the species pool of species-rich parts. Variation in species composition was scale dependent because the relative importance of specific complex gradients changed with increasing sampling-unit size, and because the amount of randomness in data sets decreased with increasing sampling-unit size. Our results indicate that broad landscape structural changes will have consequences for landscape-scale species richness that are hard or impossible to predict by simple surrogate variables.


Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift-norwegian Journal of Geography | 2001

Heterogeneity as a measure of spatial pattern for monitoring agricultural landscapes

Wendy Jane Fjellstad; Wenche E. Dramstad; Geir-Harald Strand; G. L. A. Fry

The Norwegian monitoring programme for agricultural landscapes is a sample-based programme that aims to document the current state and patterns of change in the agricultural landscape for the entire country. For this broad geographical coverage an indicator approach is the most cost-effective methodology. Landscape metrics are used as indicators in the monitoring programme based on the assumed importance of landscape composition and spatial pattern for a number of countryside interests. However, although indicators have been used successfully over a long period of time in various disciplines, their use in landscape monitoring is relatively new and there is little empirical data with which to assess their validity. This paper provides information on the performance of landscape diversity and landscape heterogeneity indices as estimated by specific biodiversity measures. Preliminary results show increasing numbers of breeding bird species and numbers of vascular plant species with increasing landscape diversity and heterogeneity, two indices that capture information on landscape content and structure. Overall, the heterogeneity index provided a better surrogate for species richness than the diversity index.


Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research | 2016

Effects of bioenergy extraction on visual preferences in boreal forests: a review of surveys from Finland, Sweden and Norway.

Vegard Gundersen; Nicholas Clarke; Wenche Dramstad; Wendy Jane Fjellstad

ABSTRACT Increased forest biomass production for bioenergy will have various consequences for landscape scenery, depending on both the landscape features present and the character and intensity of the silvicultural and harvesting methods used. We review forest preference research carried out in Finland, Sweden and Norway, and discuss these findings in relation to bioenergy production in boreal forest ecosystems. Some production methods and related operations incur negative reactions among the public, e.g. stump harvesting, dense plantation, soil preparation, road construction, the use of non-native species, and partly also harvest of current non-productive forests. Positive visual effects of bioenergy production tend to be linked to harvesting methods such as tending, thinning, selective logging and residue harvesting that enhance both stand and landscape openness, and visual and physical accessibility. Relatively large differences in findings between studies underline the importance of local contextual knowledge about landscape values and how people use the particular landscape where different forms of bioenergy production will occur. This scientific knowledge may be used to formulate guiding principles for visual management of boreal forest bioenergy landscapes.


Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift-norwegian Journal of Geography | 2010

Rule-based GIS-modelling for management purposes: A case study from the islands of Froan, Sør-Trøndelag, mid-western Norway

Anders Bryn; Wenche Dramstad; Wendy Jane Fjellstad; Frauke Hofmeister

The coastal heath region along the western coast of Norway, dominated by Calluna vulgaris, is undergoing rapid change. Vegetation changes are caused by changes in management, including reduced frequency or abandonment of periodic heath burning and reduced cutting and grazing. The islands of Froan, in the outermost part of Sør-Trøndelag County in mid-western Norway, are dominated by coastal heath in a state of recession due to reduced traditional land use. The coastal heath is acknowledged as vulnerable and valuable by national environmental authorities, and local landscape management is supported by different national subsidies. The authors mapped the vegetation on Froan and used rule-based GIS-modelling to predict the relative potential for future vegetation changes. The model was based on a range of map layers, including management themes such as history of heath burning and peat removal, current practices of sheep grazing, and also themes derived from the vegetation map, such as soil nutrients, soil moisture and present management status. The resulting model output provides relative probabilities of future changes under different land-use scenarios, and highlights where management efforts should be focused in order to maintain the traditional landscape character.


Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2006

Patterns of variation in vascular plant species richness and composition in SE Norwegian agricultural landscapes

Harald Bratli; Tonje Økland; Rune Halvorsen Økland; Wenche Dramstad; Reidar Elven; Gunnar Engan; Wendy Jane Fjellstad; Einar Heegaard; Oddvar Pedersen; Heidi Solstad


Ecological Indicators | 2007

Opportunities and limitations in assessing the multifunctionality of agriculture within the CAPRI model

Klaus Mittenzwei; Wendy Jane Fjellstad; Wenche Dramstad; Ola Flaten; Arnt Kristian Gjertsen; Maria Loureiro; Sjur Spildo Prestegard


153 | 2010

Mapping and Monitoring of Nordic Vegetation and Landscapes

Anders Bryn; Wenche Dramstad; Wendy Jane Fjellstad


72 | 2004

A cluster analysis of Norwegian municipalities with respect to agriculture's multifunctionality

Klaus Mittenzwei; Maria Loureiro; Wenche Dramstad; Wendy Jane Fjellstad; Ola Flaten; Arnt Kristian Gjertsen; Sjur Spildo Prestegard


Ecosystem services | 2017

Ecosystem services mapping for detection of bundles, synergies and trade-offs: Examples from two Norwegian municipalities

Martina Fernandez-Campo; Beatriz Rodríguez-Morales; Wenche Dramstad; Wendy Jane Fjellstad; Emilio Díaz-Varela


50 | 2007

3Q - Jordbrukets kulturlandskap - Status og utviklingstrekk. Fylker: Hedmark og Oppland

Wendy Jane Fjellstad; Wenche Dramstad; Bjørn Huso

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Wenche Dramstad

American Museum of Natural History

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Gunnar Engan

American Museum of Natural History

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Sebastian Eiter

Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute

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Gerardo Moreno

University of Extremadura

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Harald Bratli

American Museum of Natural History

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