DESCRIPTION

The module r.stream.stats is prepared to calculate Horton's statistics of drainage network.

OPTIONS

-c
Print only catchment's characteristics. Useful for shell script calculation or collecting data in external tables.
-o
Print only parameters for every order. Useful to visualise Horton's law with external software (see example bellow).
-m
Only for very large data sets. Use segment library to optimise memory consumption during analysis.
stream_rast
Stream network: name of input stream raster map produced by r.watershed or r.stream.extract, on which ordering will be performed. Because stream network produced by r.watershed and r.stream.extract may slighty differ in detail, it is required to use both stream_rast and direction map produced by the same module. The stream_rast background shall have NULL value or zero value. Background values of NULL are by default produced by r.watershed and r.stream.extract. If not 0 or NULL use r.mapcalc to set background values to NULL.
direction
Flow direction: name of input direction raster map produced by r.watershed or r.stream.extract. If r.stream.extract output raster map is used, it only has non-NULL values in places where streams occur. NULL (nodata) cells are ignored, zero and negative values are valid direction data if they vary from -8 to 8 (CCW from East in steps of 45 degrees). Direction map shall be of type CELL values. Region resolution and map resolution must be the same. Also stream_rast network map must have the same resolution. It is checked by default. If resolutions differ the module informs about it and stops. Region boundary and maps boundary may differ but it may lead to unexpected results.
elevation
Elevation: name of input elevation map. Map can be of type CELL, FCELL or DCELL. It is not restricted to resolution of region settings as stream_rast and direction raster map.

OUTPUTS

Output statistics are send to standard output or to a file if specified using the output option. Aletrnatively, to redirect output to a file use redirection operators: > or >> (Unix only). If redirection is used, output messages are printed on stderr (usually terminal) while statistics are written to the file. Statistics can be print as a formatted summary information with number of parameters or as a catchement's descriptive statistics and table with statistics for every order.

NOTES

These statistics are calculated according to formulas given by R. Horton (1945). Horton didn't define precisely what is stream slope, consequently 2 different approaches have been proposed. The first (slope) uses cell-by-cell slope calculation. The second (gradient) uses the difference between elevation of outlet and source of every channel to its length to calculate formula. Bifurcation ratio for every order is calculated acording to the formula: n_streams[1]/n_stream[i+1] where i is the current order and i+1 is the next higher order. For max order of the cell value of streams is zero. Rest of the ratios are calculated in similar mode. The bifurcation and other ratios for the whole catchment (map) is calculated as mean i.e. sum of all bifurcation ratio / max_order-1 (for max_order stream bifurcation ratio = 0). It is strongly recommended to extract the stream network using basin map created with r.stream.basins. If the whole stream order raster map is used, the calculation will be performed but results may not have hydrological sense. For every order (std) means that statistics are calculated with standard deviation: Ratios: For the whole basin: Ratios:

For the whole basins ratios are calculated acording two formulas: as a mean of ratios for every order, or as a antilog of slope coefficient of the regression model: order vs. log10(parameter)

The module calculates statistics for all streams in input stream_rast map. It is strongly recommended to extract only network of one basin, but it is not necessary for computation. Streams for the desired basin can be extracted by the following r.mapcalc formula:

# xxx denotes the category of desired basin
r.mapcalc "sel_streams = if(basin == xxx, streams, null())"

It is also possible to calculate Horton's statistics for Shreve ordering but it has no hydrological sense. Hack (or Gravelius hierarchy) main stream is not the same what so called Horton's reverse ordering (see Horton 1945).

The module can work only if direction raster map, stream_rast map and region have the same settings. It is also required that stream_rast map and direction map come from the same source. For lots of reason this limitation probably cannot be omitted. This means that if stream_rast map comes from r.stream.extract also direction map from r.stream.extract must be used. If the stream network was generated with MFD method also MFD direction map must be used.

EXAMPLE

Create table with order statistics. This table can easily be sent to external program (like R) to be visualized (assuming a unix-like command line):
g.region -p -a raster=elevation
r.watershed elevation=elevation threshold=10000 drainage=direction stream=streams
r.stream.stats stream_rast=horton direction=direction elevation=elevation
# export for processing in R
r.stream.stats -o stream_rast=horton direction=direction elevation=elevation > tmp_file

R
# now in R
r=read.csv("tmp_file", skip=1, header=TRUE)
plot(num_of_streams~order, data=r, log="y", 
     main="Sperafish area", 
     sub=paste("Bifurcation ratio: ",
               round(1/10^model$coefficients[2], 3)))
model=lm(log10(num_of_streams)~order, data=r)
abline(model)

REFERENCES

SEE ALSO

r.mapcalc, r.stream.channel, r.stream.distance, r.stream.extract, r.stream.order, r.stream.segment, r.stream.slope, r.stream.snap, r.watershed

See also r.streams.* modules wiki page.

AUTHOR

Jarek Jasiewicz, Adam Mickiewicz University, Geoecology and Geoinformation Institute.

Last changed: $Date$