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When plotTing data over time, for example: horizontal axis: fish stock and vertical axis: year (1990-2010).
This is called a line graph, with time shown on the x-axis in seconds, minutes, hours etc. and the data values shown on the y-axis.
In a line plot, an interval refers to the distance between two consecutive points on the horizontal axis, which often represents time or a category. It helps to define the scale of the plot and indicates how data points are spaced out over that axis. Properly setting intervals is crucial for accurately interpreting the trends and patterns shown in the data.
If you are graphing speed over a period of time, speed goes on the y-axis and time goes on the x-axis.
The horizontal axis will be time and the vertical axis will be the measure of the plant health. The graph will be a step-function unless the health remains the same for all time. The vertical axis depends on how you have chosen to categorise plant health: for example: thriving, mostly good, OK, mostly poor, weak, dead.