11

With your help in another thread I have managed to plot some global maps. First I convert meteorological GRIB2 data to Netcdf and then plot the global maps.

Now I want to plot just a subregion of the map. I have tried crop command and succesfully extracted the subregion of the global nc file. But when plotting I can't find how to control axis limits. It plots a map bigger than data region so big white spaces appear on both sides.

This is the script I'm using to plot maps

library("ncdf")
library("raster")
library("maptools")

DIA=format(Sys.time(), "%Y%m%d00") # Data d'avui
url=sprintf("ftp://ftp.ncep.noaa.gov/pub/data/nccf/com/gfs/prod/gfs.%s/gfs.t00z.pgrb2f00", DIA) # Ruta del ftp
loc=file.path(sprintf("%s",url))
download.file(loc,"gfs.grb",mode="wb")

system("/usr/bin/grib2/wgrib2/wgrib2 -s gfs.grb | grep :TMP: | /usr/bin/grib2/wgrib2/wgrib2 -i gfs.grb -netcdf temp.nc",intern=T)

t2m <- raster("temp.nc", varname = "TMP_2maboveground")
rt2m <- rotate(t2m)
t2mc=rt2m-273.15

DAY=format(Sys.time(), "%Y%m%d") # Data d'avui

e=extent(-40,40,20,90)
tt=crop(t2mc,e)

png(filename="gfs.png",width=700,height=600,bg="white")    
    rgb.palette <- colorRampPalette(c("snow1","snow2","snow3","seagreen","orange","firebrick"), space = "rgb")#colors
    plot(tt,col=rgb.palette(200),main=as.expression(paste("Temperatura a 2m ",DAY," + 00 UTC",sep="")),axes=T)
dev.off()

that give this output.

cropped plot

It has to be a simple one but I am a simple R user. Thanks in advance.

EDIT: New output when adding xlim=c(-40,40),ylim=c(20,90) as suggested. It seems it does not fix the problem. But playing with x,y size of the output png file looks promising as I can adjust size to fit the map.For sure it has to be another solution, the right one I can't find.

enter image description here

5
  • Just add an xlim and a ylim to your plot commands, e.g. plot(.... , xlim = c(-10,30) , ylim = c(30 , 80 ) ) And nice plot by the way, +1 Jun 20, 2013 at 13:13
  • Maybe take a look at the googleVis package. Not sure it will help but it is pretty neat. It contains IntensityMap, GeoMap and Map functions that could perhaps help. Jun 20, 2013 at 13:47
  • Hi @SimonO101 That was my first attempt before looking at crop, not sure if tried both. Not at work now, will give a try. Thank you very much.
    – pacomet
    Jun 20, 2013 at 14:54
  • @GeoffreyAbsalom Hi and thanks. I've got some scripts using raster so I prefer not to try another package. But heard a lot of googleVis, should be in my whish list. Thanks again.
    – pacomet
    Jun 20, 2013 at 14:55
  • You have to specify your png canvas size accordingly. E.g. png(width=200,height=600, ... ) Oct 31, 2015 at 19:48

1 Answer 1

9

After downloading the data file, I can read directly with raster. I choose band 221 that (if I am not wrong) it is what you need according to this table:

library("raster")
t2mc <- raster('gfs.grb', band=221)

> t2mc
class       : RasterLayer 
band        : 221  (of  315  bands)
dimensions  : 361, 720, 259920  (nrow, ncol, ncell)
resolution  : 0.5, 0.5  (x, y)
extent      : -0.25, 359.75, -90.25, 90.25  (xmin, xmax, ymin, ymax)
coord. ref. : +proj=longlat +a=6371229 +b=6371229 +no_defs 
data source : /home/oscar/gfs.grb 
names       : gfs 

You don't need the whole extent so you use crop to get the desired extent:

e <- extent(-40,40,20,90)
tt <- crop(t2mc,e)

I have tried to display the tt raster with plot without success. However, it works correctly with spplot if you use a different extent (89.5 instead of 90):

e <- extent(-40,40,20,89.5)
tt <- crop(t2mc,e)

spplot(tt)

Now we have to add the administrative boundaries:

library(maps)
library(mapdata)
library(maptools)

ext <- as.vector(e)
boundaries <- map('worldHires',
                  xlim=ext[1:2], ylim=ext[3:4],
                  plot=FALSE)
boundaries <- map2SpatialLines(boundaries,
                               proj4string=CRS(projection(tt)))

and change the palette:

rgb.palette <- colorRampPalette(c("snow1","snow2","snow3","seagreen","orange","firebrick"),
                                space = "rgb")

spplot(tt, col.regions=rgb.palette,
       colorkey=list(height=0.3),
       sp.layout=list('sp.lines', boundaries, lwd=0.5))

spplot result

If you prefer the latticeExtra::layer approach, you can achieve a similar result with this code:

library(rasterVis)
levelplot(tt, col.regions=rgb.palette,
          colorkey=list(height=.3)) +
    layer(sp.lines(boundaries, lwd=0.5))
2
  • Gracias @oscar-perpinan Your suggestion works fine. I'm gonna look for additional spplot options for the axis, title and so on... Thanks
    – pacomet
    Jun 21, 2013 at 15:02
  • I will still look for a solution with plot.
    – pacomet
    Jun 21, 2013 at 15:02

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