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Methodology and Interpretation
PFOR - Percent forest
The percentage of forest land cover is calculated by dividing the number of
forest land cover cells in the 3 km grid cell reporting unit by the total number
cells in the grid cell boundary minus those cells classified as water (total land
area). Forests and wetlands act as filters, removing pollutants from runoff before
it enters streams. Forests and wetlands also provide habitat for a wide variety of
valuable plant and wildlife species.
Quantile: Each class contains an approximately equal number (count) of features. A quantile
classification is well-suited to linearly distributed data. Because features are grouped by the number
within each class, the resulting map can be misleading, in that similar features can be separated into
adjacent classes, or features with widely different values can be lumped into the same class. This
distortion can be minimized by increasing the number of classes.
Natural Breaks: Classes are based on natural groupings of data values. Natural break points
are identified by looking for groupings and patterns inherent in the data. The features are divided
into classes whose boundaries are set where there are relatively large jumps in the distribution of
data values.
* EMAP-West Landscape Metrics Metadata (FGDC)
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