lsm_c_lpi | R Documentation |
Largest patch index (Area and Edge metric)
lsm_c_lpi(landscape, directions = 8)
landscape |
A categorical raster object: SpatRaster; Raster* Layer, Stack, Brick; stars or a list of SpatRasters. |
directions |
The number of directions in which patches should be connected: 4 (rook's case) or 8 (queen's case). |
LPI = \frac{\max \limits_{j = 1}^{n} (a_{ij})} {A} * 100
where max(a_{ij})
is the area of the patch in square meters and A
is the total landscape area in square meters.
The largest patch index is an 'Area and edge metric'. It is the percentage of the landscape covered by the corresponding largest patch of each class i. It is a simple measure of dominance.
Because the metric is based on distances or areas please make sure your data
is valid using check_landscape
.
Percentage
0 < LPI <= 100
Approaches LPI = 0 when the largest patch is becoming small and equals LPI = 100 when only one patch is present
tibble
McGarigal K., SA Cushman, and E Ene. 2023. FRAGSTATS v4: Spatial Pattern Analysis Program for Categorical Maps. Computer software program produced by the authors; available at the following web site: https://www.fragstats.org
lsm_p_area
,
lsm_l_ta
,
lsm_l_lpi
landscape <- terra::rast(landscapemetrics::landscape)
lsm_c_lpi(landscape)
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