grainscape (version 0.4.3)

distance: Find the grains of connectivity network distance

Description

Find the shortest network distance between pairs of points using the GOC graph. This can be used as an effective distance for landscape connectivity assessments.

Usage

distance(x, y, ...)

# S4 method for goc,SpatialPoints distance(x, y, weight = "meanWeight", ...)

# S4 method for goc,matrix distance(x, y, weight = "meanWeight", ...)

# S4 method for goc,numeric distance(x, y, weight = "meanWeight", ...)

Value

A list object giving a distance matrix for each threshold in the GOC object. Distance matrices give the pairwise grains of connectivity network distances between sampling locations. Matrix indices correspond to rows in the coordinates matrix (y).

Arguments

x

A goc object produced by GOC.

y

A two column matrix or a SpatialPoints object giving the coordinates of points of interest.

...

Additional arguments (not used).

weight

The GOC graph link weight to use in calculating the distance. Please see Details for explanation.

Author

Paul Galpern and Alex Chubaty

References

Fall, A., M.-J. Fortin, M. Manseau, D. O'Brien. (2007) Spatial graphs: Principles and applications for habitat connectivity. Ecosystems 10:448:461.

Galpern, P., M. Manseau. (2013a) Finding the functional grain: comparing methods for scaling resistance surfaces. Landscape Ecology 28:1269-1291.

Galpern, P., M. Manseau. (2013b) Modelling the influence of landscape connectivity on animal distribution: a functional grain approach. Ecography 36:1004-1016.

Galpern, P., M. Manseau, A. Fall. (2011) Patch-based graphs of landscape connectivity: a guide to construction, analysis, and application for conservation. Biological Conservation 144:44-55.

Galpern, P., M. Manseau, P.J. Wilson. (2012) Grains of connectivity: analysis at multiple spatial scales in landscape genetics. Molecular Ecology 21:3996-4009.

See Also

GOC, point

Examples

Run this code
## Load raster landscape
tiny <- raster::raster(system.file("extdata/tiny.asc", package = "grainscape"))

## Create a resistance surface from a raster using an is-becomes reclassification
tinyCost <- raster::reclassify(tiny, rcl = cbind(c(1, 2, 3, 4), c(1, 5, 10, 12)))

## Produce a patch-based MPG where patches are resistance features=1
tinyPatchMPG <- MPG(cost = tinyCost, patch = tinyCost == 1)

## Extract a representative subset of 5 grains of connectivity
tinyPatchGOC <- GOC(tinyPatchMPG, nThresh = 5)

## Three sets of coordinates in the study area
loc <- cbind(c(30, 60, 90), c(30, 60, 90))

## Find the GOC network distance matrices between these points
## for each of the 5 grains of connectivity
tinyDist <- grainscape::distance(tinyPatchGOC, loc)

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