Indexing and Referencing

dblodgett@usgs.gov

Introduction

nhdplusTools offers a few indexing functions and some supporting functions that are worth being aware of. Most of these functions wrap similar but more general functions from hydroloom.

The core functions are: get_flowline_index() and get_waterbody_index() – they do the heavy lifting of finding flowlines and waterbodies near point locations.

For flowline indexes, there are a number of useful utilities: - disambiguate_flowline_indexes() uses numeric or character attributes to attempt to determine the best flowline match when many near by matches exist. This is especially useful for mainstem / tributary disambiguation. - get_hydro_location() retrieves the point location of an index along a flowline. - rescale_measures() converts 0:100 reachcode measures to 0:100 flowline measures. - get_partial_length() retrieves a partial length (upstream and downstream) of an index location. - get_path_lengths() retrieves the distance between the outlets of pairs of flowlines. Use with get_partial_length() to determine network distance between indexes.

For waterbody indexes, the get_wb_outlet() function is helpful too determine which flowline is the outlet of a waterbody.

Flowline Indexing

First we’ll load up some data. In this case, we use flowlines from the NHDPlus subset that’s included in the package and a set of points to index. We’ll use the NHDPlus Gages layer for this example. The data in this example is big. The R session needs a lot of memory to hold the whole NHDPlus flowline layer and run the calculations.

library(nhdplusTools)

nhdplus_path(file.path(work_dir, "natseamless.gpkg"))

flowlines <- sf::read_sf(nhdplus_path(), "NHDFlowline_Network") |>
  sf::st_zm()
gages <- sf::read_sf(nhdplus_path(), "Gage")

Now we can call get_flowline_index() on the data we just loaded. The get_flowline_index() function has an input, search_radius which should correspond to the units of the points input. Projection and unit conversion is attempted. See the function documentation for details. See the documentation of the nn2 function from the RANN package for more information on how the search works.

NOTE: If you have a small area in which you need flowline indexes, get_flowline_index() has an option to download flowlines in the bounding box of your input points.

indexes <- get_flowline_index(sf::st_transform(flowlines, 5070), # albers
                              sf::st_transform(sf::st_geometry(gages), 5070), 
                              search_radius = units::set_units(200, "meters"), 
                              max_matches = 1)
#> Warning in index_points_to_lines.hy(x, points, search_radius = search_radius, :
#> converting to LINESTRING, this may be slow, check results

indexes <- left_join(sf::st_sf(id = c(1:nrow(gages)), 
                               geom = sf::st_geometry(gages)), 
                     indexes, by = "id")

plot(sf::st_geometry(sf::st_zm(flowlines)))
plot(sf::st_geometry(indexes), add = TRUE)

Now let’s look at the results and see how the get_flowline_index() did. The below shows the percent of COMIDs and REACHCODEs that match and shows a histogram of the measure differences for the REACHCODEs that were matched.

p_match <- 100 * length(which(indexes$COMID %in% gages$FLComID)) / nrow(gages)
paste0(round(p_match, digits = 1), 
       "% were found to match the COMID in the NHDPlus gages layer")
#> [1] "58.7% were found to match the COMID in the NHDPlus gages layer"

p_match <- 100 * length(which(indexes$REACHCODE %in% gages$REACHCODE)) / nrow(gages)
paste0(round(p_match, digits = 1), 
       "% were found to match the REACHCODE in the NHDPlus gages layer")
#> [1] "60.9% were found to match the REACHCODE in the NHDPlus gages layer"

matched <- cbind(indexes, 
                 dplyr::select(sf::st_drop_geometry(gages), 
                               REACHCODE_ref = REACHCODE, 
                               COMID_ref = FLComID, 
                               REACH_meas_ref = Measure)) %>%
  dplyr::filter(REACHCODE == REACHCODE_ref) %>%
  dplyr::mutate(REACH_meas_diff = REACH_meas - REACH_meas_ref)

hist(matched$REACH_meas_diff, breaks = 100, 
     main = "Difference in measure for gages matched to the same reach.")


round(quantile(matched$REACH_meas_diff, 
               probs = c(0, 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 0.9, 1)), 
      digits = 2)
#>    0%   10%   25%   50%   75%   90%  100% 
#> -5.54 -1.02 -0.48  0.06  1.02  6.91 19.59

Flowline Indexing with higher precision

The above example used the native nodes of the NHDPlus as the potential measure snap locations. The get_flowline_index() function has the ability to refine these by segmentizing the line to some given resolution. Let’s try the same thing using a resolution of 10m and see if we can do any better.

Note that the sf::st_segmentize function takes care of the distance conversion and segmentizes our lon/lat lines to 10m on the fly. Also note, we are working in units of degrees for this sample. (this is probably not a good way to do things, but is being shown here for the sake of demonstration)

indexes <- get_flowline_index(flowlines, 
                              sf::st_geometry(gages), 
                              search_radius = units::set_units(0.1, "degrees"), 
                              precision = 10)
#> Warning in index_points_to_lines.hy(x, points, search_radius = search_radius, :
#> converting to LINESTRING, this may be slow, check results

indexes <- left_join(data.frame(id = seq_len(nrow(gages))), indexes, by = "id")

Now lets look at out comparison again.

p_match <- 100 * length(which(indexes$COMID %in% gages$FLComID)) / nrow(gages)
paste0(round(p_match, digits = 1), 
       "% were found to match the COMID in the NHDPlus gages layer")
#> [1] "76.1% were found to match the COMID in the NHDPlus gages layer"

p_match <- 100 * length(which(indexes$REACHCODE %in% gages$REACHCODE)) / nrow(gages)
paste0(round(p_match, digits = 1), 
       "% were found to match the REACHCODE in the NHDPlus gages layer")
#> [1] "76.1% were found to match the REACHCODE in the NHDPlus gages layer"

matched <- cbind(indexes, 
                 dplyr::select(sf::st_set_geometry(gages, NULL), 
                               REACHCODE_ref = REACHCODE, 
                               COMID_ref = FLComID, 
                               REACH_meas_ref = Measure)) %>%
  dplyr::filter(REACHCODE == REACHCODE_ref) %>%
  dplyr::mutate(REACH_meas_diff = REACH_meas - REACH_meas_ref)

hist(matched$REACH_meas_diff, breaks = 100, 
     main = "Difference in measure for gages matched to the same reach.")


round(quantile(matched$REACH_meas_diff, 
               probs = c(0, 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 0.9, 1)), digits = 2)
#>    0%   10%   25%   50%   75%   90%  100% 
#> -1.31 -0.66 -0.34 -0.05  0.14  0.68  1.29

Finding multiple indexes

get_flowline_index() has a parameter max_matches that controls how many indexed flowlines are returned per point. This is useful for points that are near many flowlines and some further disambiguation is needed to determine exactly which flowline the point should be indexed to.

For this example, we’ll just look at one point but keep all the sites for disambiguation down below.

all_indexes <- get_flowline_index(flowlines,
                                  sf::st_geometry(gages), 
                                  search_radius = units::set_units(0.01, "degrees"), 
                                  max_matches = 10)
#> Warning in index_points_to_lines.hy(x, points, search_radius = search_radius, :
#> converting to LINESTRING, this may be slow, check results

indexes <- left_join(sf::st_sf(id = 42, 
                               geom = sf::st_geometry(gages)[42]), 
                     all_indexes[all_indexes$id == 42, ], by = "id")

plot(sf::st_geometry(sf::st_buffer(indexes, 500)), border = NA)
plot(sf::st_geometry(indexes), add = TRUE)
plot(sf::st_geometry(sf::st_zm(flowlines)), col = "blue", add = TRUE)

indexes
#> Simple feature collection with 10 features and 5 fields
#> Geometry type: POINT
#> Dimension:     XY
#> Bounding box:  xmin: -89.35278 ymin: 43.20867 xmax: -89.35278 ymax: 43.20867
#> Geodetic CRS:  GRS 1980(IUGG, 1980)
#>    id    COMID      REACHCODE REACH_meas       offset
#> 1  42 13293452 07090002007737     0.0000 0.0004868953
#> 2  42 13293456 07090002007738   100.0000 0.0004868953
#> 3  42 13293432 07090002007736   100.0000 0.0004868953
#> 4  42 13293430 07090002007639     0.0000 0.0008846702
#> 5  42 13293454 07090002007638   100.0000 0.0008846702
#> 6  42 13294394 07090002007637   100.0000 0.0049572540
#> 7  42 13294128 07090002007636   100.0000 0.0052999159
#> 8  42 13294382 07090002007725     0.0000 0.0052999159
#> 9  42 13294274 07090002007725     3.6313 0.0065388475
#> 10 42 13293458 07090002007725    12.5173 0.0099172984
#>                          geom
#> 1  POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)
#> 2  POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)
#> 3  POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)
#> 4  POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)
#> 5  POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)
#> 6  POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)
#> 7  POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)
#> 8  POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)
#> 9  POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)
#> 10 POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)

Now that we have multiple matches, we can use the function disambiguate_flowline_indexes() to figure out which is the “best” match. “best” is in scare quotes here because there are many potential sources of ambiguity here and we are really just narrowing down based on the information we have at hand. (read below for a case in point)

Below, we run disambiguate_flowline_indexes() on all the indexes we found then pull out the one we looked at just above as an example (gage 42 in our list).

unique_indexes <- disambiguate_flowline_indexes(
  all_indexes, 
  flowlines[, c("COMID", "TotDASqKM"), drop = TRUE],
  data.frame(ID = seq_len(nrow(gages)),
             area = gages$DASqKm))

unique_index <- left_join(sf::st_sf(id = 42, 
                                    geom = sf::st_geometry(gages)[42]), 
                          unique_indexes[unique_indexes$id == 42, ], by = "id")

plot(sf::st_geometry(sf::st_buffer(indexes, 500)), border = NA)
plot(sf::st_geometry(indexes), add = TRUE)
plot(sf::st_geometry(sf::st_zm(flowlines[flowlines$COMID %in% indexes$COMID,])), 
     col = "grey", lwd = 3, add = TRUE)
plot(sf::st_geometry(sf::st_zm(flowlines[flowlines$COMID %in% unique_index$COMID,])),
     col = "blue", add = TRUE)


unique_index
#> Simple feature collection with 1 feature and 5 fields
#> Geometry type: POINT
#> Dimension:     XY
#> Bounding box:  xmin: -89.35278 ymin: 43.20867 xmax: -89.35278 ymax: 43.20867
#> Geodetic CRS:  GRS 1980(IUGG, 1980)
#>   id    COMID      REACHCODE REACH_meas       offset                       geom
#> 1 42 13293454 07090002007638        100 0.0008846702 POINT (-89.35278 43.20867)

As can be seen in this example, a drainage area disambiguation resulted in an unexpected result. Further inspection of this particular gage and the network data used, shows that the main path through this small diversion is coded counter to the main path in the real world. So in this case, if our interest is in the best match to the hydrographic network data we have, this is the best match, as the closest spatial match is incorrectly modeled by the hydrographic data set. As always, buyer beware!

Waterbody Indexing

The get_flowline_index() function estimates a hydrographic address as a linear reference to a flowline. For points near bodies of water, these could be an inappropriate kind of index. This is because where flowlines run through a waterbody. they are “artificial paths” and do not represent the waterbody. The get_waterbody_index() function is intended to address points that are in or near the shore of a waterbody.

This next block of code loads the NHDPlus Waterbody layer and creates an interactive map. Of interest on gages that are near the short of bodies of water but far away from flowlines. Note that we drop the NHDPlus geometry and use the source LonSite and LatSite attributes for geometry.

waterbody <- sf::read_sf(nhdplus_path(), "NHDWaterbody")

gages <- sf::st_drop_geometry(gages) %>%
  dplyr::filter(!is.na(LonSite)) %>%
  sf::st_as_sf(coords = c("LonSite", "LatSite"), crs = 4326)

plot(sf::st_geometry(sf::st_zm(flowlines)))
plot(sf::st_geometry(waterbody), add = TRUE)
plot(sf::st_geometry(gages), add = TRUE)

This next block shows how to call get_flowline_index() and get_waterbody_index() and what the output looks like.


flowline_indexes <- left_join(data.frame(id = seq_len(nrow(gages))),
                              get_flowline_index(
                                sf::st_transform(flowlines, 5070), 
                                sf::st_geometry(sf::st_transform(gages, 5070)), 
                                search_radius = units::set_units(200, "m")), by = "id")
#> Warning in index_points_to_lines.hy(x, points, search_radius = search_radius, :
#> converting to LINESTRING, this may be slow, check results
                              
indexed_gages <- cbind(dplyr::select(gages, 
                                      orig_REACHCODE = REACHCODE, 
                                      orig_Measure = Measure, 
                                      FLComID, 
                                      STATION_NM), 
                        flowline_indexes,
                        get_waterbody_index(
                          st_transform(waterbody, 5070), 
                          st_transform(gages, 5070), 
                          st_drop_geometry(flowlines), 
                          search_radius = units::set_units(200, "m")))

plot(sf::st_geometry(sf::st_zm(flowlines)))
plot(sf::st_geometry(waterbody), add = TRUE)
plot(sf::st_geometry(indexed_gages), add = TRUE)


dplyr::select(sf::st_drop_geometry(indexed_gages), near_wb_COMID, near_wb_dist, in_wb_COMID, outlet_fline_COMID)
#>    near_wb_COMID near_wb_dist in_wb_COMID outlet_fline_COMID
#> 1             NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 2       13293226    11.013063          NA           13294384
#> 3             NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 4      167120949    16.862351          NA           13294360
#> 5             NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 6             NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 7       13293262    22.640184          NA           13294312
#> 8             NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 9       13296360    50.380329          NA           13297172
#> 10            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 11            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 12      13293262    64.925912          NA           13294312
#> 13      13293262   164.160184          NA           13294312
#> 14     167120949    39.327388          NA           13294360
#> 15            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 16            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 17            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 18      13293284    57.456159    13293284                 NA
#> 19      13293262    33.292260          NA           13294312
#> 20            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 21            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 22            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 23      13293226   181.370856          NA           13294384
#> 24            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 25      14711422    22.566279          NA                 NA
#> 26            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 27            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 28            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 29            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 30            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 31            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 32            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 33            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 34            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 35            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 36      13293316    37.633591    13293316           13294374
#> 37            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 38            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 39      13293322     6.737635          NA           13294344
#> 40            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 41            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 42      13293322     3.914543          NA           13294344
#> 43            NA           NA          NA                 NA
#> 44      13293322     6.737635          NA           13294344
#> 45      13293262    50.163000          NA           13294312

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