An Incremental and Philosophically Different Approach to Measuring Raster Patch Porosity

A new method for measuring the porosity of individual 2D raster patches in a GIS for characterizing the combined complexity of a shape’s edge in conjunction with its internal perforations is developed. The method is centered on comparing the number of cellular edge–edge joins rel...

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Main Author: Tarmo K. Remmel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-09-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/10/3413
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spelling doaj-e16fdcb55a8c49eabbe22409115ef3282020-11-25T00:45:00ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-09-011010341310.3390/su10103413su10103413An Incremental and Philosophically Different Approach to Measuring Raster Patch PorosityTarmo K. Remmel0Department of Geography, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, CanadaA new method for measuring the porosity of individual 2D raster patches in a GIS for characterizing the combined complexity of a shape’s edge in conjunction with its internal perforations is developed. The method is centered on comparing the number of cellular edge–edge joins relative to the theoretical maximum number of similar joins possible given a set number of cells comprising a landscape patch. As this porosity (Φ) increases, the patch (or shape) can be viewed as deviating from a maximally compact form, comprising higher edge complexity and internal heterogeneity (inclusion of perforations). The approach is useful for characterizing shapes for which a simple perimeter- or area-based metric misses the internal complexity and where the porosity of the patch may provide insight into spatial processes leading to the development of the landscape fabric. I present theoretical results to illustrate the mechanics of the approach and a small case study of boreal wildfire residual vegetation patches in Ontario, where real resulting wildfire process-driven landscape patches are assessed for their porosity at five spatial resolutions. The results indicate that naturally occurring and unsuppressed boreal wildfires in the study area typically produce residual vegetation patches with an average porosity of 17.6%, although this value varies slightly with the spatial resolution of the data representation.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/10/3413planarbinary patternpatchperforationshapecomplexity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tarmo K. Remmel
spellingShingle Tarmo K. Remmel
An Incremental and Philosophically Different Approach to Measuring Raster Patch Porosity
Sustainability
planar
binary pattern
patch
perforation
shape
complexity
author_facet Tarmo K. Remmel
author_sort Tarmo K. Remmel
title An Incremental and Philosophically Different Approach to Measuring Raster Patch Porosity
title_short An Incremental and Philosophically Different Approach to Measuring Raster Patch Porosity
title_full An Incremental and Philosophically Different Approach to Measuring Raster Patch Porosity
title_fullStr An Incremental and Philosophically Different Approach to Measuring Raster Patch Porosity
title_full_unstemmed An Incremental and Philosophically Different Approach to Measuring Raster Patch Porosity
title_sort incremental and philosophically different approach to measuring raster patch porosity
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-09-01
description A new method for measuring the porosity of individual 2D raster patches in a GIS for characterizing the combined complexity of a shape’s edge in conjunction with its internal perforations is developed. The method is centered on comparing the number of cellular edge–edge joins relative to the theoretical maximum number of similar joins possible given a set number of cells comprising a landscape patch. As this porosity (Φ) increases, the patch (or shape) can be viewed as deviating from a maximally compact form, comprising higher edge complexity and internal heterogeneity (inclusion of perforations). The approach is useful for characterizing shapes for which a simple perimeter- or area-based metric misses the internal complexity and where the porosity of the patch may provide insight into spatial processes leading to the development of the landscape fabric. I present theoretical results to illustrate the mechanics of the approach and a small case study of boreal wildfire residual vegetation patches in Ontario, where real resulting wildfire process-driven landscape patches are assessed for their porosity at five spatial resolutions. The results indicate that naturally occurring and unsuppressed boreal wildfires in the study area typically produce residual vegetation patches with an average porosity of 17.6%, although this value varies slightly with the spatial resolution of the data representation.
topic planar
binary pattern
patch
perforation
shape
complexity
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/10/3413
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