A new arc–chord ratio (ACR) rugosity index for quantifying three-dimensional landscape structural complexity
详细信息   
摘要
Introduction Rugosity is an index of surface roughness that is widely used as a measure of landscape?structural complexity in studies investigating spatially explicit ecological patterns and processes. This paper identifies and demonstrates significant issues with how we presently measure rugosity and, by building on recent advances, proposes a novel rugosity index that overcomes these issues. Methods The new arc-chord ratio (ACR) rugosity index is defined as the contoured area of the surface divided by the area of the surface orthogonally projected onto a plane of best fit (POBF), where the POBF is a function (interpolation) of the boundary data?only.?The ACR method is described in general, so that it may be applied to a range of rugosity analyses, and its application is detailed for three common analyses: (a) measuring the rugosity of a two-dimensional profile, (b) generating a rugosity raster from an elevation raster (a three-dimensional analysis), and (c) measuring the rugosity of a three-dimensional surface. Case studies and results Two case studies are used to compare the ACR rugosity index with the rugosity index most commonly used?(i.e. surface ratio rugosity), demonstrating the advantages of the ACR index. Discussion and conclusions The?ACR method for quantifying rugosity is simple, accurate, extremely versatile, and consistent in its principles independent of data dimensionality (2-D or 3-D), scale and analysis software used. It overcomes significant issues presented by traditional rugosity indices (e.g. decouples rugosity from slope) and is a promising new landscape metric.?To further increase ease of use I provide multiple ArcGIS? resources in the electronic?supplementary materials (e.g. Online Appendix 1:?a?downloadable ArcToolbox containing two ACR rugosity geoprocessing model tools).