library("sftrack")
# Make tracks from raw data
# raccoon <- read.csv(system.file('extdata/raccoon_data.csv', package='sftrack'))
data('raccoon', package = 'sftrack')
$month <- as.POSIXlt(raccoon$timestamp)$mon+1
raccoon
$time <- as.POSIXct(raccoon$timestamp, tz='EST')
raccoon= c('longitude','latitude')
coords = list(id = raccoon$animal_id, month = as.POSIXlt(raccoon$timestamp)$mon+1)
group = 'time'
time = 'fix'
error = '+proj=longlat +ellps=WGS84 +datum=WGS84 +no_defs'
crs <- as_sftrack(data = raccoon, coords = coords, group = group, time = time, error = error, crs = crs)
my_sftrack <- as_sftraj(data = raccoon, coords = coords, group = group, time = time, error = error, crs = crs) my_sftraj
As stated earlier, the geometry column is built using sf
, so the column functions exactly as it would in sf
. You can modify it and redefine it using the sf
tools. More specifically the geometry column of an sf_track object is an sfc
column. The main difference between a standard sf
object created using st_as_sf
is that we automatically allow empty geometries, where as this option is turned off by default in st_as_sf()
.
$geometry my_sftrack
## Geometry set for 445 features (with 168 geometries empty)
## Geometry type: POINT
## Dimension: XY
## Bounding box: xmin: -80.28149 ymin: 26.06761 xmax: -80.27046 ymax: 26.07706
## CRS: +proj=longlat +ellps=WGS84 +datum=WGS84 +no_defs
## First 5 geometries:
## POINT EMPTY
## POINT (-80.27906 26.06945)
## POINT EMPTY
## POINT EMPTY
## POINT (-80.27431 26.06769)
An sftrack
object is simply an sfc
of sfc_POINTS
, this contrasts with an sftraj
object which is a mixture of a POINT
and LINESTRING
. This is because a trajectory can have a start point and an NA end point, a line segment, or an NA and an end point. This allows no-loss conversion back and forth between sftrack
and an sftraj
, and because linestrings can not have a NULL point in them.
$geometry my_sftraj
## Geometry set for 445 features (with 168 geometries empty)
## Geometry type: GEOMETRY
## Dimension: XY
## Bounding box: xmin: -80.28149 ymin: 26.06761 xmax: -80.27046 ymax: 26.07706
## CRS: +proj=longlat +ellps=WGS84 +datum=WGS84 +no_defs
## First 5 geometries:
## POINT EMPTY
## POINT (-80.27906 26.06945)
## POINT EMPTY
## POINT EMPTY
## LINESTRING (-80.27431 26.06769, -80.2793 26.06867)
This does mean that not all sf
functions will handle an sftraj
object like it would an sftrack
if there are NAs in the data set. In these cases st_is_empty()
can help to subset the points that contain geometry data.
As an sftrack object is an sf object essentially all of the sf functions will work on it.
library("sf")
st_length(my_sftraj)[1:10]
## Units: [m]
## [1] 0.000000 0.000000 0.000000 0.000000 510.096380 107.395332
## [7] 5.625847 0.000000 0.000000 15.748173
<- data.frame(
df1 id = c(1,1,1,1),
time = as.POSIXct('2020-01-01 12:00:00', tz = 'UTC') + 60*60*(1:4),
x = c(1,3,3,2),
y = c(1,1,3,4)
)
<- st_linestring(rbind(
road c(1,2),
c(5,2),
c(5,0)
)
)
<- as_sftraj(df1)
animal1 plot(animal1)
plot(road, col = 'red', add = T)
# Does the animal cross the road?
any(st_intersects(animal1, road, sparse = F))
## [1] TRUE
# When?
$time[st_intersects(animal1, road, sparse = F)] animal1
## [1] "2020-01-01 14:00:00 UTC"
# How often does the animal stay near the road?
st_is_within_distance(animal1, road, 1)
## Sparse geometry binary predicate list of length 4, where the predicate
## was `is_within_distance'
## 1: 1
## 2: 1
## 3: 1
## 4: (empty)
# How close is the animal from the road?
st_distance(animal1, road)
## [,1]
## [1,] 1
## [2,] 0
## [3,] 1
## [4,] 2
The only thing to remember, is that a sftraj is a GEOMETRY
column, and occasionally a function may not work with it. In those cases is_linestring()
can be used to filter out points that do not have a t2.
sftrack
is built to work with sf
base plot methods. This means you can use most of the sf
plot methods, sftrack
largely just controls the grouping of the plot then feeds it back to plot.sf()
.
plot(my_sftraj)
plot(my_sftraj, key.pos = 4, key.width = lcm(4), key.length = 1)
get_key_pos(my_sftraj)
## NULL
This means that everytime you change the active_group, the plot view will change.
active_group(my_sftraj$sft_group) <- 'id'
active_group(my_sftraj$sft_group)
## [1] "id"
plot(my_sftraj)
Most arguments for plot.sf
are available to use as additional arguments to plot
.
plot(my_sftrack, axes = TRUE, cex=5)
This is a work in progress, but theres a geom_sftrack function that feeds geom_sf
with the correct plotting information. Like geom_sf
you input data
into the geom_sftrack function and not into ggplot()
. Again ggplot assumes active_group is the grouping variable. Plots vary slightly based on if they’re sftrack of sftraj class.
Geom_sftrack is essentially geom_sf(data = data, aes(color = group_labels(data))) with NULL points subetted out. This may help when a user requires more advanced modification than the geom_sftrack allows.
library("ggplot2")
ggplot() + geom_sftrack(data = my_sftraj)
You can use geom_sftrack just like any other ggplot layer, which means you can continue to make manuscript quality plots.
<- c('TTP-041_1'= 'dodgerblue1','TTP-041_2'= 'darkseagreen2',
cols 'TTP-058_1' = 'darkorchid1', 'TTP-058_2' = 'khaki3')
ggplot() + geom_sftrack(data = my_sftrack, size=3, alpha = 0.5) +
scale_color_manual(values = cols) +
ggtitle('Raccoons at Tree Tops Park Winter 2020') +
theme_bw() +
theme(axis.text.x = element_text(angle = 45, hjust = 1))
To help with working with more complex sftraj objects, there is a growing suite of sftraj
specific functions:
sftraj
objects create linestrings for each row of data, as each row is not assumed to be related to the next row of data. This data structure may become inefficient to work with when plotting large data sets. When appropriate these trajectories can be generalized by combining linestrings where lines meet.
For plotting purposes we can create these linestrings quickly and plot them at much faster speeds than individual lines.
For plot
and geom_sftrack
there is an argument called step_mode that refers to whether youd like to plot the lines individually (step_mode = T
), or generalize them into connected linestrings (step_mode = F
). By default step_mode is set to TRUE.
library("ggplot2")
ggplot() + geom_sftrack(data = my_sftraj, step_mode = TRUE)
You’ll notice that the appearance of the plot changes as the POINTs are also displayed. This is because step mode adds POINTS to the plot that contain a fill as well as a color property.
This function returns a data.frame (x,y,z) of the point at t1 of each sftraj geometry. It works nearly identically to sf::st_coordinates()
.
coord_traj(my_sftraj$geometry)[1:10,]
## [,1] [,2]
## [1,] NA NA
## [2,] -80.27906 26.06945
## [3,] NA NA
## [4,] NA NA
## [5,] -80.27431 26.06769
## [6,] -80.27930 26.06867
## [7,] -80.27908 26.06962
## [8,] -80.27902 26.06963
## [9,] NA NA
## [10,] -80.27900 26.06982
If youd like to retain the geometries but still pull out t1 point you can use pts_traj()
. This functions returns a list of the beginning point of each sftraj geometry, or an sfc column when using the argument sfc = TRUE
.
pts_traj(my_sftraj$geometry)[1:5]
## [[1]]
## POINT EMPTY
##
## [[2]]
## POINT (-80.27906 26.06945)
##
## [[3]]
## POINT EMPTY
##
## [[4]]
## POINT EMPTY
##
## [[5]]
## POINT (-80.27431 26.06769)
pts_traj(my_sftraj$geometry, sfc= TRUE)[1:5]
## Geometry set for 5 features (with 3 geometries empty)
## Geometry type: POINT
## Dimension: XY
## Bounding box: xmin: -80.27906 ymin: 26.06769 xmax: -80.27431 ymax: 26.06945
## CRS: +proj=longlat +ellps=WGS84 +datum=WGS84 +no_defs
## POINT EMPTY
## POINT (-80.27906 26.06945)
## POINT EMPTY
## POINT EMPTY
## POINT (-80.27431 26.06769)
May help if you’d like to quickly filter an sftraj
object to just contain pure linestrings. is_linestring()
returns TRUE or FALSE if the geometry is a linestring. This does not recalculate anything, it just filters out steps that contained NAs in either phase. Its nearly identical to st_is(x,‘LINESTRING’), but may be more intuitive for users.
is_linestring(my_sftraj$geometry)[1:10]
## [1] FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE TRUE TRUE FALSE FALSE TRUE
<- my_sftraj[is_linestring(my_sftraj$geometry),]
new_sftraj head(new_sftraj)
## Sftraj with 6 features and 12 fields (0 empty geometries)
## Geometry : "geometry" (XY, crs: +proj=longlat +ellps=WGS84 +datum=WGS84 +no_defs)
## Timestamp : "time" (POSIXct in UTC)
## Grouping : "sft_group" (*id*)
## -------------------------------
## animal_id latitude longitude timestamp height hdop vdop fix month
## 5 TTP-058 26.06769 -80.27431 2019-01-19 04:02:30 858 5.1 3.2 2D 1
## 6 TTP-058 26.06867 -80.27930 2019-01-19 05:02:30 350 1.9 3.2 3D 1
## 7 TTP-058 26.06962 -80.27908 2019-01-19 06:02:30 11 2.3 4.5 3D 1
## 10 TTP-058 26.06982 -80.27900 2019-01-19 17:02:30 NA 2.0 3.3 3D 1
## 11 TTP-058 26.06969 -80.27894 2019-01-19 18:02:05 8 4.2 2.5 3D 1
## 12 TTP-058 26.07174 -80.27890 2019-01-19 19:02:04 -3 0.9 1.5 3D 1
## time sft_group geometry
## 5 2019-01-19 04:02:30 (id: TTP-058, month: 1) LINESTRING (-80.27431 26.06...
## 6 2019-01-19 05:02:30 (id: TTP-058, month: 1) LINESTRING (-80.2793 26.068...
## 7 2019-01-19 06:02:30 (id: TTP-058, month: 1) LINESTRING (-80.27908 26.06...
## 10 2019-01-19 17:02:30 (id: TTP-058, month: 1) LINESTRING (-80.279 26.0698...
## 11 2019-01-19 18:02:05 (id: TTP-058, month: 1) LINESTRING (-80.27894 26.06...
## 12 2019-01-19 19:02:04 (id: TTP-058, month: 1) LINESTRING (-80.2789 26.071...
For use in movement models, you may need to calculate the dx, dy, length, and turn angles of each step. You can do that in sftrack
using step_metrics()
. It should be noted it will accept an sftrack
object, however, it first converts the geometries internally to sftraj
geometries and then calculates step metrics. As with other sf
objects, the return is assumed to be in the units of the crs
when not specified. Absolute angle is measured in radians.
step_metrics(my_sftraj[1:10,])
## dx dy dist dt abs_angle rel_angle speed
## 1 NA NA NA 3600 NA NA NA
## 2 0.000000 0.0000000 0.000000 3600 NA NA 0.000000000
## 3 NA NA NA 3600 NA NA NA
## 4 NA NA NA 3600 NA NA NA
## 5 498.309348 109.0329742 510.096380 3600 2.9272914 NA 0.141693439
## 6 22.473674 105.0175956 107.395332 3600 1.3588662 -1.568425 0.029832037
## 7 5.549011 0.9266259 5.625847 3574 0.1645841 -1.194282 0.001574104
## 8 0.000000 0.0000000 0.000000 3626 NA NA 0.000000000
## 9 NA NA NA 32400 NA NA NA
## 10 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
## sftrack_id
## 1 TTP-058_2019-01-19 00:02:30
## 2 TTP-058_2019-01-19 01:02:30
## 3 TTP-058_2019-01-19 02:02:30
## 4 TTP-058_2019-01-19 03:02:30
## 5 TTP-058_2019-01-19 04:02:30
## 6 TTP-058_2019-01-19 05:02:30
## 7 TTP-058_2019-01-19 06:02:30
## 8 TTP-058_2019-01-19 07:02:04
## 9 TTP-058_2019-01-19 08:02:30
## 10 TTP-058_2019-01-19 17:02:30