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ForSysR

Scenario planning for land management

ForSys a land management planning model that explores potential outcomes across many possible priorities, including but not limited to landscape restoration and hazardous fuel management. The model is spatially explicit and uses multi-criteria prioritization and optimization methods that can rapidly process scenarios, from small to very large-scales (~10,000 acres to more than 180 million acres). The previous iteration of the ForSys program was called the Landscape Treatment Designer (LTD), and was used in several published studies. ForSys has been used in several research and applied case studies at a range of scales (projects, forests, states, continental United States) to prioritize landscape-scale treatments (see case studies). ForSys is available in a windows desktop GUI (ForSysX) and an R version (ForSysR).

Installation

The current official version of the forsys package can be installed from GitHub using the following code. Note that in order to use the patchmax package, you need to install that package as well. The current official version of the patchmax package can be installed from GitHub.

We recommend updating other packages when prompted.

if (!require(remotes)) install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("forsys-sp/forsysr")
remotes::install_github("forsys-sp/patchmax")

Usage

Here we will provide a short example showing how the forsys package can be used to build and solve simple multi-objective landscape management problems. For brevity, we will use one of the built-in simulated datasets that is distributed with the package. First, we will load the forsys package.

library(forsys)

# In order to run the examples below, these additional libraries are required:
library(sf)
library(dplyr)

Loading data

Although forsys can support many different types of treatment unit data, here our treatment units are represented as polygons in a spatial vector format. Each polygon represents a different treatment unit.

# load treatment unit data
data(test_forest)
# show the first rows in the attribute table
head(test_forest)
## Simple feature collection with 6 features and 16 fields
## Geometry type: POLYGON
## Dimension:     XY
## Bounding box:  xmin: -1805472 ymin: 2689815 xmax: -1799472 ymax: 2690815
## Projected CRS: NAD83 / Conus Albers
##   stand_id proj_id area_ha priority1 priority2 priority3 priority4 threshold1
## 1        1      86     100      0.42      0.53      0.48      0.51          1
## 2        2      86     100      0.42      0.49      0.48      0.65          1
## 3        3      86     100      0.42      0.45      0.48      0.66          1
## 4        4      86     100      0.42      0.42      0.48      0.60          1
## 5        5      86     100      0.43      0.39      0.48      0.62          1
## 6        6      86     100      0.44      0.37      0.48      0.51          1
##   threshold2 boundary1 boundary2 cluster1 cluster2 cluster3 mosaic1 mosaic2
## 1          1         0         0        0        1        0       2       3
## 2          1         0         0        2        1        0       2       3
## 3          1         0         0        2        0        0       1       3
## 4          1         0         0        2        0        0       1       3
## 5          1         0         0        2        0        1       2       3
## 6          0         0         0        2        0        1       2       3
##                         geometry
## 1 POLYGON ((-1805472 2690815,...
## 2 POLYGON ((-1804472 2690815,...
## 3 POLYGON ((-1803472 2690815,...
## 4 POLYGON ((-1802472 2690815,...
## 5 POLYGON ((-1801472 2690815,...
## 6 POLYGON ((-1800472 2690815,...
# plot the treatment units
plot(test_forest[,c(4:5,7:10)], border=NA)

Running a ForSys Scenario

Forsys prioritizes projects by maximizing an objective given one or more constraints. The objectives represent one or more management priorities while the constraints may include a maximum cost or area treated. Thresholds are environmental or categorical conditions that trigger the need to treat an indiviudal treatment unit or stand (e.g., a particular ownership or minimum forest cover). Forsys then builds projects and ranks them in order of their priority. Projects can be either predefined units (e.g., watersheds) or can be built dynamically.

Let’s set up a very simple forsys run to see how things work. We’ll use the test_forest data shown above. We want to find the top 2000 ha within each predefined project based on ‘priority1’.

plot(test_forest[,c('proj_id','priority1')], border=NA)

We run forsys with the following arguments. Forsys always writes its outputs to csv files saved within the output folder, but we can optionally set it to write that data out to a list which has three elements containing the outputs.

stand_dat <- test_forest %>% st_drop_geometry()

run_outputs <- forsys::run(
  return_outputs = TRUE,
  scenario_name = "test_scenario",
  stand_data = stand_dat,
  stand_id_field = "stand_id",
  proj_id_field = "proj_id",
  stand_area_field = "area_ha",
  scenario_priorities = "priority1",
  scenario_output_fields = c("area_ha", "priority1", "priority2", "priority3", "priority4"),
  proj_fixed_target =  TRUE,
  proj_target_field = "area_ha",
  proj_target_value = 2000
)

Not surprisingly, the treatment rank of the projects selected corresponds directly to those areas where priority1 was highest, as plotted below. Projeck rank #1 (darkest blue) is the highest ranked project.

plot_dat <- test_forest %>%
  group_by(proj_id) %>% summarize() %>%
  left_join(run_outputs$project_output %>% select(proj_id, treatment_rank))
plot(plot_dat[,'treatment_rank'], main="Project rank")

Below we plot the stands rather than the project rank and only retain those stands that were treated.

plot_dat_2 <- test_forest %>% select(stand_id) %>%
  left_join(run_outputs$stand_output %>% mutate(stand_id = as.integer(stand_id))) %>%
  select(stand_id, priority1, proj_id) %>%
  left_join(run_outputs$project_output %>% select(proj_id, treatment_rank))
plot(plot_dat_2[,c('treatment_rank','priority1')], border=NA)

Multiple priorities

Next we look at multiple priorities. Plotting priorities 1 and 2 shows that areas where priority 1 are highest tend to be lower for priority 2.

plot(test_forest[,c('priority1','priority2')], border=NA)

Let’s see if forsys can find locations where we can achieve both objectives. We prioritize on both variables, priority1 and priority2. We run forsys weighting the two objectives from 0 to 5, which results in 21 scenarios. We then filter the results to observe the outcome of the scenario where the two objectives are equally weighted. The project rank graph represents areas that are highest for both priorities.

run_outputs_3 = forsys::run(
  return_outputs = TRUE,
  scenario_name = "test_scenario",
  stand_data = stand_dat,
  stand_id_field = "stand_id",
  proj_id_field = "proj_id",
  stand_area_field = "area_ha",
  scenario_priorities = c("priority1","priority2"),
  scenario_weighting_values = c("0 5 1"),
  scenario_output_fields = c("area_ha", "priority1", "priority2", "priority3", "priority4"),
  proj_fixed_target =  TRUE,
  proj_target_field = "area_ha",
  proj_target_value = 2000
)

Notice we will need to filter the outputs to find the scenario where each priority is equally weighted. We do this by filtering the priority scores. Pr_1 indicates the first priority score, and Pr_2 indicates the second priority score.

plot_dat_3 <- test_forest %>%
  group_by(proj_id) %>% summarize() %>%
  left_join(run_outputs_3$project_output %>% filter(Pr_1_priority1 == 1 & Pr_2_priority2 == 1) %>% 
              select(proj_id, treatment_rank))

plot(plot_dat_3[,'treatment_rank'], main="Project rank for two priorities")

Alternatively we could pass forsys the weighted scenario alone, rather than running through all the weights and the 21 scenario outcomes. Here we will utilize the combine_priorities function that we call outside of the forsys run function.

# Create a new combined priority variable to pass directly to our priority weightings based on priority 1 and priority 2
test_forest <- test_forest %>% forsys::combine_priorities(
  fields = c('priority1','priority2'), 
  weights = c(1,1), 
  new_field = 'combo_priority')

# Recreate our input dataset
stand_dat <- test_forest %>% st_drop_geometry()

# Rerun forsys with the same scenario, passing the combo_priority as the new priority
run_outputs_4 = forsys::run(
  return_outputs = TRUE,
  scenario_name = "test_scenario",
  stand_data = stand_dat,
  stand_id_field = "stand_id",
  proj_id_field = "proj_id",
  stand_area_field = "area_ha",
  scenario_priorities = c("combo_priority"),
  scenario_output_fields = c("area_ha", "priority1", "priority2", "priority3", "priority4"),
  proj_fixed_target =  TRUE,
  proj_target_field = "area_ha",
  proj_target_value = 2000
)

plot_dat_4 <- test_forest %>%
  group_by(proj_id) %>% summarize() %>%
  left_join(run_outputs_4$project_output %>% select(proj_id, treatment_rank))
plot(plot_dat_4[,'treatment_rank'], main="Project rank")

Let’s make this scenario a bit more complex by using a stand threshold and limiting stand selection to locations where threshold2 = 1 (yellow areas in the map below).

plot(test_forest[,c('combo_priority','threshold2')], border=NA)

Let’s run this scenario.

run_outputs_5 = forsys::run(
  return_outputs = TRUE,
  scenario_name = "test_scenario",
  stand_data = stand_dat,
  stand_id_field = "stand_id",
  proj_id_field = "proj_id",
  stand_area_field = "area_ha",
  stand_threshold = "threshold2 == 1",
  scenario_priorities = c("combo_priority"),
  scenario_output_fields = c("area_ha", "priority1", "priority2", "priority3", "priority4"),
  proj_fixed_target =  TRUE,
  proj_target_field = "area_ha",
  proj_target_value = 2000
)

plot_dat_5 <- test_forest %>%
  group_by(proj_id) %>% summarize() %>%
  left_join(run_outputs_5$project_output %>% select(proj_id, treatment_rank))

plot(plot_dat_5[,'treatment_rank'], main="Project rank for two priorities for threshold2")

Exploring different project prioritization methods

Forsys can build projects dynamically using a package called patchmax, which requires some additional arguments and a shapefile as the input. Here we will prioritize priority2 and build five 25,000 hectare patches.

library(patchmax)

# We will set run_with_patchmax to TRUE, then in the run functions we set the search distance weight to 1 to expand the search for high objective stands. We'll limit our search to test only 10% of the stands as patch seeds to speed up our run.
run_outputs_6 = forsys::run(
  return_outputs = TRUE,
  stand_data = test_forest,
  scenario_name = "patchmax_test",
  stand_id_field = "stand_id",
  stand_area_field = "area_ha",
  stand_threshold = "threshold2 >= 1",
  scenario_priorities = "priority2",
  scenario_output_fields = c("area_ha", "priority1", "priority2", "priority3", "priority4"),
  run_with_patchmax = TRUE,
  patchmax_proj_size = 25000,
  patchmax_proj_number = 5,
  patchmax_SDW = 1,
  patchmax_sample_frac = 0.1
)

# Plot treatment rank of patches

plot_dat_6 <- run_outputs_6$stand_output %>% filter(DoTreat == 1) %>%
  mutate(treatment_rank = proj_id, stand_id = as.integer(stand_id))
plot_dat_6 <- test_forest %>% left_join(plot_dat_6 %>% select(stand_id, treatment_rank)) %>%
  group_by(treatment_rank) %>% summarize()
plot(plot_dat_6[,'treatment_rank'], border=NA, main="Patch rank")

Citation

Please cite the forsys package when using it in publications. To cite the current official version, please use:

Evers C, Houtman R, Day M, Belavenutti P, and Ager A. (2023). ForSysR: A scenario planning platform for modeling multi-criteria spatial priorities in R. R package version 0.9. Available at https://github.com/forsys-sp/forsysr.

Additional resources

The package website contains information on the forsys package.

Getting help

If you have any questions about the forsys package or suggestions for improving it, please post an issue on the code repository.