I am conducting a vegetation study of the effects of prescribed fire. I have an experimental area that will be burned and a control area that will not be burned. The experimental area has three types of vegetation present so I am stratifying the survey locations proportional to relative size (area) of each vegetation type. The same three vegetation types are present in the control area, but the relative proportion of each is different than the experimental area, despite the total size (area) being very similar. The plan is to use an ANOVA for anyalyses, looking at data from before and after the fire.
My question is, what is the relative importance of maintaining equal sample sizes versus equal sample densities?
In other words, should I sample the same number of points in each control strata as its equivelant experimental strata, or should I sample the control strata with equal density as its equivelant experimental strata? In the second option, because the overall areas are the same, the overall sample sizes would be the same, but the individual strata would have different sample sizes between the control and experimental areas.
Searching online shows virtually endless information about sample size, but less about sample density, and I didn't find anything comparing the two.
Note: Technically, I believe there is only a sample size of one here since the treatment (fire) is only being applied to one area. What I am refering to as samples are really replicates since they aren't independent of each other, but I think the ideas will be the same and I figured discussing this for samples would interest a broader audience.