Abstract:
Researchers are often times confronted with compositional data in insect choice studies. The
choice of a statistical method to model this type of data is always not obvious. In this study, three
approaches for analysis of compositional data from choice tests made by the predatory parasitoid
Cotesia sesamaie Cameron in a four-arm olfactometer was explored using centered, additive and
isometric log ratio transformations. Oviposition induced plant volatiles (OIPVs), herbivore
induced plant volatiles (HIPVs), and two controls were tested in the four-arm olfactometer. The
response variable measured was time spent in each field of the olfactometer, when the time to
observe the insect was restricted to 12 minutes. The data generated in this study was
compositional, thus it conveys exclusively relative information and has a constant sum constraint
such that standard statistical methods of analysis (ANOVA, t-test), cannot be used on this data.
This study therefore explored the log ratio methodology advocated by Aitchison (1986). CLT,
ALT, and ILR log ratio transformations were then performed using CoDaPack statistical
software. Using this methodology, mean differences in olfactometer response of female parasitic
wasp, Cotesia sesamiae to OIPVs, HIPVs, and control were computed. These findings imply that
the CLR transformation is probably the best choice for processing raw compositional data prior
to analysis by standard statistical methods. These results revealed that the, parasitic wasps spent
much time in olfactometer arm with OIPVs, followed by the olfactometer arm with HIPVs and
lastly spent least time in the control arm of the olfactometer. More studies need to be conducted
using the log-ratio methodology on olfactometer bioassay data from a different species of
parasitic wasps.
Language:
English
A Case Of Olfactometer Bioassay Data From Insect Behavioural Studies
Date of publication:
2013
Approximate date:
Log Ratio Methodology for Analysis of Compositional Data: A case of Olfactometer Bioassay Data from Insect Behavioural Studies
Country:
Region Focus:
East Africa
University/affiliation:
Collection:
RUFORUM Theses and Dissertations
Agris Subject Categories:
Agrovoc terms:
Additional keywords:
Licence conditions:
Open Access
Access restriction:
Supervisor:
Dr John Mwibanda Wesonga, JKUAT, Kenya and Dr Daisy Salifu, ICIPE, Kenya
Form:
Printed resource
ISSN:
E_ISSN:
Edition:
Extent:
xi,57