Description Usage Arguments Details Value Author(s) References See Also Examples
View source: R/diversity_new.R
Produces estimates of diversity from FIA data. Returns shannon's index, shannon's equitability, and richness for alpha (mean/SE of stands), beta, and gamma diversity. Default behavior estimates species diversity, using TPA
as a state variable and SPCD
to groups of individuals. Estimates can be produced for regions defined within the FIA Database (e.g. counties), at the plot level, or within user-defined areal units. Options to group estimates by size class and other variables defined in the FIADB. If multiple reporting years (EVALIDs) are included in the data, estimates will be output as a time series. If multiple states are represented by the data, estimates will be output for the full region (all area combined), unless specified otherwise (e.g. grpBy = STATECD
).
1 2 3 4 5 | diversity(db, grpBy = NULL, polys = NULL, returnSpatial = FALSE, bySizeClass = FALSE,
landType = 'forest', treeType = 'live', method = 'TI', lambda = .5,
stateVar = TPA_UNADJ, grpVar = SPCD, treeDomain = NULL,
areaDomain = NULL, byPlot = FALSE, condList = FALSE, totals = FALSE,
variance = FALSE, nCores = 1)
|
db |
|
grpBy |
variables from PLOT, COND, or TREE tables to group estimates by (NOT quoted). Multiple grouping variables should be combined with |
polys |
|
returnSpatial |
logical; if TRUE, merge population estimates with |
bySizeClass |
logical; if TRUE, returns estimates grouped by size class (default 2-inch intervals, see |
landType |
character ('forest' or 'timber'); Type of land which estimates will be produced for. Timberland is a subset of forestland (default) which has high site potential and non-reserve status (see details). |
treeType |
character ("all", "live", "dead", or "gs"); Type of tree that estimates will be produced for. All (default) includes all stems, live and dead, greater than 1 in. DBH. Live/Dead includes all stems greater than 1 in. DBH which are live or dead (leaning less than 45 degrees), respectively. GS (growing-stock) includes live stems greater than 5 in. DBH which contain at least one 8 ft merchantable log. |
method |
character; design-based estimator to use. One of: "TI" (temporally indifferent, default), "annual" (annual), "SMA"" (simple moving average), "LMA" (linear moving average), or "EMA" (exponential moving average). See Stanke et al 2020 for a complete description of these estimators. |
lambda |
numeric (0,1); if |
stateVar |
variable from TREE table to use as state variable (NOT quoted). Default, |
grpVar |
factor, variable from TREE table to define individual groups (NOT quoted). Default, |
treeDomain |
logical predicates defined in terms of the variables in PLOT, TREE, and/or COND tables. Used to define the type of trees for which estimates will be produced (e.g. DBH greater than 20 inches: |
areaDomain |
logical predicates defined in terms of the variables in PLOT and/or COND tables. Used to define the area for which estimates will be produced (e.g. within 1 mile of improved road: |
totals |
logical; if TRUE, return total population estimates (e.g. total area) along with ratio estimates (e.g. mean trees per acre). |
variance |
logical; if TRUE, return estimated variance ( |
byPlot |
logical; if TRUE, returns estimates for individual plot locations instead of population estimates. |
condList |
logical; if TRUE, returns condition-level summaries intended for subsequent use with |
nCores |
numeric; number of cores to use for parallel implementation. Check available cores using |
Estimation Details
Estimation of forest variables follows the procedures documented in Bechtold and Patterson (2005) and Stanke et al 2020. Procedures for computing diversity indices are outlined in Hill (1973) and Shannon (1948).
Alpha-level indices are computed as the mean diversity of a stand. Specifically, alpha diversity is estimated using a sample-based ratio-of-means estimator of stand diversity (e.g. Richness) * land area of stand / total land area within the domain of interest. Thus estimates of alpha diversity within a stand are weighted by the area that stand represents. Gamma-level diversity is computed as a regional index, pooling all plot data together. Beta diversity is computed as gamma diversity - alpha diversity, and thus represents the excess of regional diversity with respect to local diversity.
Users may specify alternatives to the 'Temporally Indifferent' estimator using the method
argument. Alternative design-based estimators include the annual estimator ("ANNUAL"; annual panels, or estimates from plots measured in the same year), simple moving average ("SMA"; combines annual panels with equal weight), linear moving average ("LMA"; combine annual panels with weights that decay linearly with time since measurement), and exponential moving average ("EMA"; combine annual panels with weights that decay exponentially with time since measurement). The "best" estimator depends entirely on user-objectives, see Stanke et al 2020 for a complete description of these estimators and tradeoffs between precision and temporal specificity.
When byPlot = FALSE
(i.e., population estimates are returned), the "YEAR" column in the resulting dataframe indicates the final year of the inventory cycle that estimates are produced for. For example, an estimate of current forest area (e.g., 2018) may draw on data collected from 2008-2018, and "YEAR" will be listed as 2018 (consistent with EVALIDator). However, when byPlot = TRUE
(i.e., plot-level estimates returned), the "YEAR" column denotes the year that each plot was measured (MEASYEAR), which may differ slightly from its associated inventory year (INVYR).
Stratified random sampling techniques are most often employed to compute estimates in recent inventories, although double sampling and simple random sampling may be employed for early inventories. Estimates are adjusted for non-response bias by assuming attributes of non-response plot locations to be equal to the mean of other plots included within thier respective stratum or population.
Working with "Big Data"
If FIA data are too large to hold in memory (e.g., R throws the "cannot allocate vector of size ..." errors), use larger-than-RAM options. See documentation of link{readFIA}
for examples of how to set up a Remote.FIA.Database
. As a reference, we have used rFIA's larger-than-RAM methods to estimate forest variables using the entire FIA Database (~50GB) on a standard desktop computer with 16GB of RAM. Check out our website for more details and examples.
Easy, efficient parallelization is implemented with the parallel
package. Users must only specify the nCores
argument with a value greater than 1 in order to implement parallel processing on their machines. Parallel implementation is achieved using a snow type cluster on any Windows OS, and with multicore forking on any Unix OS (Linux, Mac). Implementing parallel processing may substantially decrease free memory during processing, particularly on Windows OS. Thus, users should be cautious when running in parallel, and consider implementing serial processing for this task if computational resources are limited (nCores = 1
).
Definition of forestland
Forest land must be at least 10-percent stocked by trees of any size, including land that formerly had such tree cover and that will be naturally or artificially regenerated. Forest land includes transition zones, such as areas between heavily forested and nonforested lands that are at least 10-percent stocked with trees and forest areas adjacent to urban and builtup lands. The minimum area for classification of forest land is 1 acre and 120 feet wide measured stem-to-stem from the outer-most edge. Unimproved roads and trails, streams, and clearings in forest areas are classified as forest if less than 120 feet wide. Timber land is a subset of forest land that is producing or is capable of producing crops of industrial wood and not withdrawn from timber utilization by statute or administrative regulation. (Note: Areas qualifying as timberland are capable of producing at least 20 cubic feet per acre per year of industrial wood in natural stands. Currently inaccessible and inoperable areas are NOT included).
Dataframe or SF object (if returnSpatial = TRUE
). If byPlot = TRUE
, values are returned for each plot (PLOT_STATUS_CD = 1
when forest exists at the plot location). All variables with names ending in SE
, represent the estimate of sampling error (%) of the variable. When variance = TRUE
, variables ending in VAR
denote the variance of the variable and N
is the total sample size (i.e., including non-zero plots).
H_a: mean Shannon's Diversity Index, alpha (stand) level
H_b: Shannon's Diversity Index, beta (landscape) level
H_g: Shannon's Diversity Index, gamma (regional) level
Eh_a: mean Shannon's Equitability Index, alpha (stand) level
Eh_b: Shannon's Equitability Index, beta (landscape) level
Eh_g: Shannon's Equitability Index, alpha (stand) level
S_a: mean Species Richness, alpha (stand) level
S_b: Species Richness, beta (landscape) level
S_g: Species Richness, gamma (regional) level
nStands: number of stands with non-zero plots used to compute alpha diversity estimates
Hunter Stanke and Andrew Finley
rFIA website: https://rfia.netlify.app/
FIA Database User Guide: https://www.fia.fs.fed.us/library/database-documentation/
Bechtold, W.A.; Patterson, P.L., eds. 2005. The Enhanced Forest Inventory and Analysis Program - National Sampling Design and Estimation Procedures. Gen. Tech. Rep. SRS - 80. Asheville, NC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 85 p. https://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/gtr/gtr_srs080/gtr_srs080.pdf
Stanke, H., Finley, A. O., Weed, A. S., Walters, B. F., & Domke, G. M. (2020). rFIA: An R package for estimation of forest attributes with the US Forest Inventory and Analysis database. Environmental Modelling & Software, 127, 104664.
Analysis of ecological communities. (2002). United States: M G M SOFTWARE DESIGN (OR).
Hill, M. O. (1973). Diversity and Evenness: A Unifying Notation and Its Consequences. Ecology, 54(2), 427-432. doi:10.2307/1934352.
Shannon, C. E. (1948). A Mathematical Theory of Communication. Bell System Technical Journal, 27(3), 379-423. doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1948.tb01338.x.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 | ## Load data from rFIA package
data(fiaRI)
data(countiesRI)
## Make a most recent subset
fiaRI_mr <- clipFIA(fiaRI)
## Most recent estimates for live stems on forest land
diversity(db = fiaRI_mr,
landType = 'forest',
treeType = 'live')
## Same as above at the plot-level
diversity(db = fiaRI_mr,
landType = 'forest',
treeType = 'live',
byPlot = TRUE)
## Most recent estimates grouped by stand age on forest land
# Make a categorical variable which represents stand age (grouped by 10 yr intervals)
fiaRI_mr$COND$STAND_AGE <- makeClasses(fiaRI_mr$COND$STDAGE, interval = 10)
diversity(db = fiaRI_mr,
grpBy = STAND_AGE)
## Estimates for live white pine ( > 12" DBH) on forested mesic sites (all available inventories)
diversity(fiaRI,
treeType = 'live',
treeDomain = DIA > 12,
areaDomain = PHYSCLCD %in% 21:29) # Mesic Physiographic classes
## Most recent estimates for growing-stock on timber land by species
diversity(db = fiaRI_mr,
landType = 'timber',
treeType = 'gs',
bySizeClass = TRUE)
## Same as above, implemented in parallel
parallel::detectCores(logical = FALSE) # 4 cores available, we will take 2
diversity(db = fiaRI_mr,
landType = 'timber',
treeType = 'gs',
bySizeClass = TRUE,
nCores = 2)
## Most recent estimates for all stems on forest land grouped by user-defined areal units
ctSF <- diversity(clipFIA(fiaRI, mostRecent = TRUE),
polys = countiesRI,
returnSpatial = TRUE)
plot(ctSF) # Plot multiple variables simultaneously
plotFIA(ctSF, H_a) # Plot of mean Shannons Index of stands
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