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Habitat Analysis in ArcGIS

Habitat Analysis in ArcGIS. Use of Spatial Analysis to characterize used resources Thomas Bonnot. http://web.missouri.edu/~bonnott/. Introduction. GIS Modeling Summarizing characteristics of resources associated with fish and wildlife use Resource Selection, Survival, Movement

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Habitat Analysis in ArcGIS

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  1. Habitat Analysis in ArcGIS Use of Spatial Analysis to characterize used resources Thomas Bonnot http://web.missouri.edu/~bonnott/

  2. Introduction • GIS Modeling • Summarizing characteristics of resources associated with fish and wildlife use • Resource Selection, Survival, Movement • Descriptive and Exploratory Purposes • Types of GIS Data Involved • Organization and Preparation of Data • Ways to automate Geoprocessing

  3. Spatial Analysis • Spatial Analysis: The study of the locations and shapes of geographic features and the relationships between them • Measuring distances between points • Modeling the behavior of ecosystems • Geoprocessing Tools Tools that prepare, manipulate, and analyze data spatially

  4. Characterizing resources associated with features of use • Inputs • Features representing use • Resourceor environmental data of interest

  5. Spatial Features Types of features in ArcGIS • Point  Nest Site; Telemetry Location • Line  Movement Path; River; Xsct • Polygon  Home Range; Nest Plot

  6. Spatial Features cont. • Feature Class • Group of features of the same geometry • Can be filed in different formats Shapefile

  7. Resource Data • Contain information and data about the resources of interest • Can be feature classes

  8. Rasters • Made up of square cells • Each cell represents a specific portion of an area • Describes location and relative position in space • And the characteristics of that area

  9. Rasters Containing Thematic Data • Represent some measured quantity or classification of a particular phenomena

  10. Image Rasters • Images or photographs • Still composed of cells • Cells represent colors or spectral reflectance

  11. Missouri Land Cover, Classified Satellite Imagery – 30m

  12. USDA NAIP Color Infrared Aerial Photography – 1m

  13. Digitized Land Cover for Study Site

  14. Have the Data.How do we characterize? Use Features Resource Data Layers

  15. Geoprocessing for Characterizing Used Resources

  16. Geoprocessing for Characterizing Used Resources

  17. Right Click on the Layer and go to “Joins and Relates”

  18. Geoprocessing for Characterizing Used Resources

  19. Geoprocessing for Characterizing Used Resources

  20. Organizing Data Tables in ArcGIS • Important Consideration in Spatial Analysis • Geoprocessing Tools produce outputs in different tables and with different formats • Joining and Summarizing Tables

  21. Joining TablesGetting output data into master datasets Common Attribute (Unique Identifier) Desired Attribute Output from Tool Master Dataset

  22. Right Click on the Layer • Go to “Joins”  “Relates”

  23. Summarizing Tables When output tables have Multiple Records For the Same Feature

  24. Right Click on the Field • Go to “Summarize” Choose statistic to summarize

  25. Model Builder to automate Geoprocessing • Create Models to link together multiple Geoprocessing Tools • Can set parameters ahead of time or allow for them to be entered manually

  26. Right click on a Toolbox • Go to “New”  “Model”

  27. To Create Parameters • Right click on Tool • Go to “Make Variable”  “From Parameter” • Select the parameter for use in the dialogue box • Click and Drag tools to Model Builder Window • Connect tools together so that outputs from one tool become inputs for the next

  28. After saving the model, open the model from ArcToolbox to see a dialogue box where you can specify the input and output parameters

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