Fixed area plots at the stand boundary
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Sample plots are selected via their centers: if a sample point falls into forest, then a plot is established. For all sample points that may fall outside the forest area, no plot is established. It may happen that the sample point comes to lie close to the forest boundary so that part of the sample plot slops over. Of course, if this is not taken into account, an error is induced because the tree observations that are made refer to a smaller plot area only.
To correct for this effect, various techniques are applied in practice, as depicted in Figure 1. The mirage technique is recommended and commonly applied; it is simple to do and does not produce a systematic error. Plot shifting is – from a strict statistical point of view – never permitted. Using option D in Figure 1, one needs to take into account that plots have different areas; then, the ratio estimator may be applied which complicated the estimation process a little bit.
The mirage technique is easily applied as illustrated in Figure 2: the center of a border plot is mirrored at the stand boundary outside the forest. From this mirrored sample point, the plot is again laid out. Most of that plot is outside the forest, but those trees that are in this plot are tallied again. That means that some trees at the stand boundary are recorded twice and count twice for the plot observation. While the mirage procedure may sound strange at the first glance, the mathematical proof can easily be given applying the inclusion zone approach. This is illustrated in Figure 3: there are three trees close to the stand boundary. Two are so close that part of their inclusion zone is outside the forest. As, per definition, sample points can not be selected outside the forest, these trees 1 and 3 have parts of their inclusion zones that can not be sampled (if not properly corrected for); their selection probability would be corresponding to the area of the inclusion zone that is inside the forest stand; that is: the selection probability of the trees close to the stand boundary would be smaller.
[[File:4.3-fig56.png|center|thumb|500px|Figure 3 Illustration of the inclusion zone approach at the stand boundary, and application of the mirage technique. The mirage technique guarantees that those parts of the inclusion zones that are outside the forest and that would have a probability of 0 to be sampled are properly taken into account (Kleinn an Volcko 2005[2]
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