Riitters et al. (2020) propose a classification scheme for forest fragmentation (which can be applied to any habitat type). The scheme relies on calculating density (e.g., number of forested cells in a window around a focal cell) and connectivity (number of cases where neighboring cells are both forested). This function calculates these classes from a GRaster
or SpatRaster
in which the focal habitat type has cell values of 1, and non-focal habitat type has cell values of 0 or NA
.
Note that by default, the SpatRaster
and GRaster
versions will create different results around the border of the raster. The SpatRaster
version uses the terra::focal()
function, which will not return an NA
value when its window overlaps the raster border if the na.rm
argument is TRUE
. However, the GRaster
version uses the GRASS module r.neighbors
, which does return NA
values in these cases.
The fragmentation classes are:
Value provided by none
: None (i.e., no forest; default is NA
).
1: Patch
2: Transitional
3: Perforated
4: Edge
5: Undetermined (not possible to obtain when w = 3
)
6: Interior