Number of disjunct core areas (Core area metric)
lsm_c_ndca(
landscape,
directions = 8,
consider_boundary = FALSE,
edge_depth = 1
)
tibble
A categorical raster object: SpatRaster; Raster* Layer, Stack, Brick; stars or a list of SpatRasters.
The number of directions in which patches should be connected: 4 (rook's case) or 8 (queen's case).
Logical if cells that only neighbour the landscape boundary should be considered as core
Distance (in cells) a cell has the be away from the patch edge to be considered as core cell
$$NDCA = \sum \limits_{j = 1}^{n} n_{ij}^{core}$$ where \(n_{ij}^{core}\) is the number of disjunct core areas.
NDCA is a 'Core area metric'. The metric summarises class i as the sum of all patches belonging to class i. A cell is defined as core if the cell has no neighbour with a different value than itself (rook's case). NDCA counts the disjunct core areas, whereby a core area is a 'patch within the patch' containing only core cells. It describes patch area and shape simultaneously (more core area when the patch is large, however, the shape must allow disjunct core areas). Thereby, a compact shape (e.g. a square) will contain less disjunct core areas than a more irregular patch.
None
NDCA >= 0
NDCA = 0 when TCA = 0, i.e. every cell in patches of class i is an edge. NDCA increases, with out limit, as core area increases and patch shapes allow disjunct core areas (i.e. patch shapes become rather complex).
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_c_tca
,
lsm_p_ncore
,
lsm_l_ndca
landscape <- terra::rast(landscapemetrics::landscape)
lsm_c_ndca(landscape)
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