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Embedding and Extending GIS for Exploratory Analysis of Large-Scale Species Distribution Data Jianting Zhang, Dept. of Computer Science The City College.

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Presentation on theme: "Embedding and Extending GIS for Exploratory Analysis of Large-Scale Species Distribution Data Jianting Zhang, Dept. of Computer Science The City College."— Presentation transcript:

1 Embedding and Extending GIS for Exploratory Analysis of Large-Scale Species Distribution Data Jianting Zhang, Dept. of Computer Science The City College of the City University of New York Le Gruenwald, School of Computer Science The University of Oklahoma

2 Outline Background and Motivation Modeling/Representation for Data Integration LEEASP: The Prototype System for Visual Exploration Related Works and Discussions

3 NEON Infrastructure Overview William K. MichenerDeborah Estrin, http://www.projectscience.org/workshop7/talks/estrin.pdf

4 Aquatic Arrays Terrestrial Arrays 4

5 Background Enabling Technologies –GPS technology in modern field survey –Geo-referring technology in transforming descriptive museum records to geographical coordinates –Internet and the cyber-infrastructure for distributed data access/integration –Spatial databases and GIS for data management and analysis Species distribution analysis – Quantifying the relationship between species distributions and the environment – Central to ecology/biogeography theories and conservation practices – Incorporating climate change and human impact scenarios

6 Background 1.Guisan, A. and N. E. Zimmermann (2000). Predictive habitat distribution models in ecology. Ecological Modelling 135(2-3): 147-186. 2.Waide, R. B., M. R. Willig, et al. (1999). The relationship between productivity and species richness. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 30, pp. 257-300. 3.Stockwell, D. R. B. and D. P. Peters (1999). The GARP modelling system: problems and solutions to automated spatial prediction. International Journal of Geographic Information Systems 13(2): 143-158. 4.Hirzel, A. H., Hausser, J., Chessel, D.,Perrin, N., 2002. Ecological-niche factor analysis: How to compute habitat-suitability maps without absence data? Ecology, 83(7), 2027-2036. Total2008200720062005200420032002200120001999 1751143166 1008546359 2383225658644752412914 324035605924222310411 41233337251297

7 Background USDA PLANT Database 89759 plant species in 3141 US counties WWF Wildfinder database: 29112 species, 4815 genus, 445 families, 69 orders in 4 classes (amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals) among the world’s 845 ecoregions 350045 species-ecoregion records USGS Little tree species distribution data: 679 NatureServe species distribution maps 5743 amphibians species worldwide 4273 birds species of the western hemisphere 1786 mammals species of the western hemisphere The availability of compiled digital datasets

8 Background EnvironmentSpecies Taxonomic (Linnaean ranks) Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species SubSpecies Phylogenentic Area Water- Energy Latitude Altitude Productivity Environmental Gradient Community – Ecosystem – Biome – Biosphere Phylogeography

9 Background Geographical Distribution Correlation Distribution Configuration Environmental Taxonomic

10 Motivations We aim at developing an integrated data model/representation that seamlessly links geographical, taxonomic and environmental data. We utilize state-of-the-art visualization techniques to build a prototype to allow visual explorations between and among relevant data: Embedding GIS for visualizing geographical maps Incorporating Graph/tree visualization for taxonomic trees and ecoregion hierarchies Using Sortable Table, Parallel Coordinate Plot (PCP) and other techniques for multivariate environmental data

11 Data Modeling/Representation Using Traditional GIS Data Model

12 Data Modeling/Representation The relationships among the geographical units in different layers are not a part of the traditional GIS data models. To use the layer-based GIS data model for managing multiple species distribution data, the geographical and the environmental data need to be joined for each layer, either permanently or dynamically. While it is possible to arrange the species layers into groups in modern GIS to mimic the taxonomic hierarchy, it is difficult to identify/visualize query results that involve multiple layers back in the layer list. Problems

13 Data Modeling/Representation The Integrated Data Model GIS Data Model

14 Data Modeling/Representation Environmental Relational (RDBMS) From/To Environmental Geographical Taxonomic Geographical GIS Object-Relational Framework Taxonomic data is now first-class citizen

15 Data Modeling/Representation Geographical Environmental Taxonomic T->G(+E) E->G(+T) G->E G->T Supported Operations Operations need to be formally defined!

16 LEEASP: Prototype http://www-cs.ccny.cuny.edu/~jzhang/tech/LEEASPV10.zip Geographical View Taxonomic View Environmental View Ecoregion View Linked Environment for Exploratory Analysis of Large-Scale Species Distribution Data

17 LEEASP: Prototype USGS NA Little dataset: 679 tree species, 90 Megabytes in ESRI Shapefile format WorldClim 10 minutes altitude and 18 bioclimate variables EPA NA Ecoregion data: up to Level III Resolution: 0.5*0.5 Deg 11777 valid cells Example Data

18 LEEASP: Prototype Geographical View Embedding GIS Based on open source JUMP GIS from Vividsolutions Designed to present the distribution information Follows “Focus+Context” principle On-screen digitizing to specify environmental gradients

19 LEEASP: Prototype Details SummaryControl Overview Environmental View

20 LEEASP: Prototype Taxonomic View 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 3 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 OR 1 G->TT->G

21 LEEASP: Prototype Ecoregion View Using the same API for Taxonomic view Based on Prefuse (Jeffrey et al, 2005) Efficient Tree Layout algorithms Advanced information visualization functions (zoom/animation)

22 LEEASP: Prototype Coordinated Multiple View Overview+Detail Focus+Context

23 Related Works/Discussions USGS (1990s): Climate-Vegetation Atlas of the North America (http://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/p1650-a/) Prasad and Iverson (1999-ongoing):A Climate Change Atlas for 80 Forest Tree Species of the Eastern United States http://www.fs.fed.us/ne/delaware/atlas/ (Forest Service) Spatiotemporal data modeling and visualization (Andrienko et al 2003, Guo et al 2006) Tree and graph visualization research (Bongshin et al 2004, Hillis et al 2005, Graham and Kennedy 2005, Parr et al 2007)

24 Related Works/Discussions LEEASP focuses on dynamic visualizations through user interactions rather than delivering static mapping results. LEEASP provides multi-way mapping among geographical, ecoregion, environmental and taxonomic data Views in LEEASP represent the four types of data are coordinated: when a subset of data in one view is selected through the graphic user interfaces, the subset of data will be identified and highlighted in other views.

25 Related Works/Discussions Future work Better formalization of the integrated data model Conduct more thorough user evaluations by domain scientists Distributed data integration based SOA Explore “mashup” technologies

26 Acknowledgements Prefuse and JUMP GIS open source development teams. This work is supported in part by NSF grant ITR #0225665 SEEK and NSF grant ATM #0619139 CEO:P-COMET. Thanks to Profs. Robert K. Peet (UNC) and Jessie Kennedy (Napier University, UK) for taxonomy help. Thanks to Dr. Weimin Xi (TAUM) and Anantha M. Prasad (USDA Forest Service) for evaluating the prototype and providing constructive suggestions. Special thanks to three anoymous ACM-GIS conference reviewers for their comments and suggestions. Conference travel is supported by faculty startup fund from the Grove School of Engineering, the City College of the City University of New York.

27 Q&A Jzhang@cs.ccny.cuny.edu 27 http://www-cs.ccny.cuny.edu/~jzhang/tech/LEEASPV10.zip


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