BRAT

Step 9 - Data Validation (Optional)

Using the Data Validation tool (Optional)

After running the BRAT tool, it can sometimes be useful calculate additional metrics on the output. The Data Validation tool adds and calculates a number of fields that further contextualize the results of a BRAT run.

Running the Tool

BRAT Data Capture Validation tool

Figure 1: BRAT Data Capture Validation tool interface.

The tool takes three inputs:

  • The Conservation Restoration Model output network
  • The name of the output
  • An optional shapefile containing points that correspond to observed beaver dams
  • An optional maximum drainage area threshold.
  • If provided, this will limit snapping of dams along large streams to points within 5 meters of the network. The reason behind this is that we have found some of these dams to be located on side channels which are not represented in the NHD network. Limiting snapping on streams above the drainage threshold helps to minimize the chance that dams will be snapped to a reach where they do not actually occur.

If not given a beaver dam shapefile, the tool will not produce the fields that rely on dams data. Be warned, the tool will snap the points of the beaver dam shapefile to the nearest reach, which will change the file given to it. If you want to retain the original position of the beaver dams, give the tool a copy of your shapefile.

If a drainage area threshold is provided, snapping of dams along large streams (i.e., streams with drainage area above the given threshold) will be limited to points within 5 meters of the network (as opposed to 60 meters otherwise). The reason behind this is that we have found some of these dams to be located on side channels which are not represented in the NHD network. Limiting snapping on streams above the drainage threshold thus helps to minimize the chance that dams will be snapped to a reach where they do not actually occur.

Output of the Tool

The tool produces eight new fields. Three of these fields are reliant on the dams input. The fields are as follows:

  • e_DamCt: The observed number of dams per segment (based on the beaver dam shape file).
  • e_DamDens: The number of dams per kilometer. Calculated by dividing e_DamCt by the segment length.
  • e_DamPcC: The ratio between the observed dam count and the calculated existing capacity. Calculated by dividing e_DamCt by oCC_EX.
  • Ex_Categor: The category of the calculated existing capacity. It is determined based on the oCC_EX (the calculated existing capacity), as follows:
    • If oCC_EX = 0, Ex_Categor = “None”
    • If 0 < oCC_EX <= 1, Ex_Categor = “Rare”
    • If 1 < oCC_EX <= 5, Ex_Categor = “Occasional”
    • If 5 < oCC_EX <= 15, Ex_Categor = “Frequent”
    • If 15 < oCC_EX, Ex_Categor = “Pervasive”
  • Hpe_Categor: The category of the calculated historic capacity. It is determined based on the oCC_HPE (the calculated historic capacity), as follows:
    • If oCC_HPE = 0, Hpe_Categor = “None”
    • If 0 < oCC_HPE <= 1, Hpe_Categor = “Rare”
    • If 1 < oCC_HPE <= 5, Hpe_Categor = “Occasional”
    • If 5 < oCC_HPE <= 15, Hpe_Categor = “Frequent”
    • If 15 < oCC_HPE, Hpe_Categor = “Pervasive”
  • `
  • mCC_EXtoHPE: The ratio between existing and historic capacity. Calculated by dividing oCC_EX by oCC_HPE.
  • ConsVRest: A reclassification of the oPBCR_CR field from the conservation restoration model based on surveyed dam locations, with categories including:
    • Immediate: Beaver conservation - reaches classified as “easiest -low-hanging fruit” with at least 25% of existing dam capacity already occupied by surveyed dams
    • Immediate: Potential Beaver Translocation - reaches classified as “easiest - low-hanging fruit” with less than 25% of existing dam capacity occupied by surveyed dams
    • Mid Term: Process-based Riparian Vegetation Restoration - reaches classified as “Straight Forward - Quick Return”
    • Long Term: Riparian Vegetation Reestablishment - reaches classified as “Strategic - Long-Term Investment”
    • Low Capacity Habitat - reaches classified as “NA”
  • BRATvSurv: The ratio between the estimated existing capacity count and the surveyed dam capacity count

Additionally, the tool adds a field named Snapped to the input beaver dams which designates whether each dam location was “snapped” to the network and therefore used in the validation or not.

Caveats

Currently the Data Validation tool is limited by the distance and relationship of dam survey locations to the NHD line. The NHD network is a rough approximation of a stream network, and often the true stream does not directly correspond with the location of the NHD line due to meandering and side channels that are not represented in the NHD. Because dams are snapped to the nearest segment of the NHD network, short reaches can be assigned multiple dams while longer adjacent reaches are assigned fewer. This causes surveyed dam densities to be overestimated on the short reaches and underestimated on the long reaches.

Original validation issue

To remedy this BRAT has integrated multichannel line segments from the original NHD file that warrant the classification of a perennial network. BRAT was previously not able to handle multichannel features. This has not fixed all these cases but many of them, because these slower flows in multichannel clusters can result in refuge from high streampower which can results in blown out or breached dams.

Multichannel/Anabranch incorporated into the model

Back to Step 8 Continue to Step 10

Back to Help Back to BRAT Home