Please note: The algorithm descriptions in English have been automatically translated. Errors may have been introduced in this process. For the original descriptions, go to the Dutch version of the Algorithm Register.

Vegetation algorithm (Iteratio 2)

ITERATIO is an application for producing maps of terrain conditions of areas for research, monitoring and nature management. Based on terrestrial and aquatic vegetations. ITERATIO uses vegetation data to derive values for environmental conditions. This allows the creation of maps that say something about whole areas in an area

Last change on 4th of January 2024, at 13:34 (CET) | Publication Standard 1.0
Publication category
Impactful algorithms
Impact assessment
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Status
In use

General information

Theme

Nature and Environment

Begin date

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Contact information

Voor vragen en opmerkingen kan je terecht bij: digitaalzuidholland@pzh.nl

Link to publication website

https://www.zuid-holland.nl/politiek-bestuur/feiten-cijfers/algoritmeregister/vegetatie-algoritme-iteratio-2/#h1ff74795-cbfa-46f8-be29-1a3ed6e8f415

Link to source registration

https://www.synbiosys.alterra.nl/iteratio/

Responsible use

Goal and impact

Vegetations on land and in water reflect a wide range of environmental conditions in the field. Knowledge of these is essential for effective nature conservation and restoration. Adjusting those terrain conditions, the non-living (abiotic) variables, creates the conditions in the terrains for valuable nature. A lot of measurement is therefore made of those site conditions. A monitoring well is a tube installed in the ground in which the groundwater level can be measured. Monitoring wells tell what the moisture condition of a terrain is, analyses of soil chemistry show how acidic, calcareous or nutrient-rich a soil is. These measurements require a lot of effort, are costly, and are also difficult to scale from measuring point to vegetation surface.

The aim of ITERATIO is to achieve better analysis of sites using the available data collected. The results should be usable by everyone from the best vegetation expert to the field officer, for policy and for research.


Currently, the results of the model are for internal use only and have no impact on citizens.

Considerations

It is a state-of-the art model to derive abiotic indicators from vegetations. It is not possible to actually measure abiotics on such a scale. It therefore provides an interesting complement to direct abiotic measurements.

Human intervention

There is no direct policy consequence of using ITERATIO. The results are presented to policy officers for information. It is a research tool. It does involve human intervention.

Risk management

The algorithm can potentially contain errors, so the results are not 100% reliable. However, given the development time and expertise of the developers, those errors are minimised as much as possible.

Legal basis

unknown

Operations

Data

vegetation map, vegetation typology, vegetation recordings, vegetation layers, species names (scientific and Dutch) and weight

Technical design

ITERATIO is a computer programme that performs calculations to create terrain condition maps (abiotic value maps).


Initially, the terrain condition to be analysed is chosen. Then, vegetation recordings are read into ITERATIO for analysis. An indicator value is attached to some of the occurring species. A series of iterative calculations produces an indicator value for all species, and an average value for the terrain condition for all recordings. The different vegetation types are usually underpinned by a number of recordings.


In ITERATIO, each vegetation type has been assigned a value for terrain condition. These values are associated with each patch of the vegetation map and made visible through colours in the abiotic value map.

Apart from easily processing the mappings prepared according to the Digital Standard with ITERATIO 2, it also provides for the import of GeoPackage output from the National Database Vegetation and Habitats (NDVH). By linking to the NDVH, analysing large numbers of vegetation mappings with ITERATIO will start to structurally contribute to broadening and deepening our knowledge of natural sites for their conservation, management and restoration.

External provider

The algorithm was developed by Alterra, who specialise in data around natural values.