About: Shapefile is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 284 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1840 citations. The topic is also known as: ESRI Shapefile.
TL;DR: ‘letsR’ is presented, a package for the R statistical computing environment, designed to handle and analyse macroecological data such as species’ geographic distributions, polygons in shapefile format and point occurrences, and environmental variables (in raster format).
Abstract: Summary 1. The current availability of large ecological data sets and the computational capacity to handle them have fostered the testing and development of theory at broad spatial and temporal scales. Macroecology has particularly benefited from this era of big data, but tools are still required to help transforming this data into information and knowledge. 2. Here, we present ‘letsR’, a package for the R statistical computing environment, designed to handle and analyse macroecological data such as species’ geographic distributions (polygons in shapefile format and point occurrences) and environmental variables (in raster format). The package also includes functions to obtain data on species’ habitat use, description year and current as well as temporal trends in conservation status as provided by the IUCN RedList online data base. 3. ‘letsR’ main functionalities are based on the presence–absence matrices that can be created with the package’s functions and from which other functions can be applied to generate, for example species richness rasters, geographic mid-points of species and species- and site-based attributes. 4. We exemplify the package’s functionality by describing and evaluating the geographic pattern of species’ description year in tailless amphibians. All data preparation and most analyses were made using the ‘letsR ’f unctions. Our example illustrates the package’s capability for conducting macroecological analyses under a single computer platform, potentially helping researchers to save time and effort in this endeavour.
TL;DR: In this article, a map and shapefile of 57 biogeographic provinces of the Neotropical region is presented, which belong to the Antillean, Brazilian and Chacoan subregions, and the Mexican and South American transition zones.
Abstract: We provide a map and shapefile of the 57 biogeographic provinces of the Neotropical region. Recognition of these provinces is based on their endemic species, but their delimitation on the map is based on ecoregions combining climatic, geological, and biotic criteria. These provinces belong to the Antillean, Brazilian and Chacoan subregions, and the Mexican and South American transition zones. We provide a vector file of the biogeographical regionalization by converting the map into a polygon shapefile and a raster file with all provinces.
TL;DR: An Open-Source Approach (OSA) is proposed, in which the geometric information in IFC is retrieved through the spatial structure of IFC, and converted into shapefile by developing an automatic multipatch generation algorithm (AMG).
TL;DR: This study aims to enhance the previously developed Open-Source Approach (OSA) by developing an enhanced Automatic Multipatch Generation (E-AMG) algorithm that is capable of transforming various types of 3D representation, such as clipping and mapped representation, to boundary representation (Brep).
TL;DR: FETEX 2.0 is intended to be a dynamic tool, integrating further data and feature extraction algorithms for the progressive improvement of land use/land cover database classification and agricultural database updating processes.