Title: | Easy Computation of Functional Diversity Indices |
---|---|
Description: | Computes six functional diversity indices. These are namely, Functional Divergence (FDiv), Function Evenness (FEve), Functional Richness (FRic), Functional Richness intersections (FRic_intersect), Functional Dispersion (FDis), and Rao's entropy (Q) (reviewed in Villéger et al. 2008 <doi:10.1890/07-1206.1>). Provides efficient, modular, and parallel functions to compute functional diversity indices (Grenié & Gruson 2023 <doi:10.1111/ecog.06585>). |
Authors: | Matthias Grenié [aut, cre] , Hugo Gruson [aut] |
Maintainer: | Matthias Grenié <[email protected]> |
License: | GPL-3 |
Version: | 1.1.1 |
Built: | 2024-11-12 04:26:27 UTC |
Source: | https://github.com/funecology/fundiversity |
This function computes Functional Dispersion (FDis) following Laliberté & Legendre (2010). NB: when a site contains no species FDis is equal to 0.
fd_fdis(traits, sp_com)
fd_fdis(traits, sp_com)
traits |
Trait matrix with species as rows and traits as columns.
It has to contain exclusively numerical values. This can be
either a |
sp_com |
Site-species matrix with sites as rows and species as columns
if not provided, the function considers all species with equal
abundance in a single site. This can be either a |
a data.frame with two columns:
site
the names of the sites as the row names of the input sp_com
,
FDis
the values of functional dispersion at each site.
If the sp_com
argument is not provided or if sp_com
doesn't have rownames,
arbitrary rownames s1
, s2
, s3
, etc. will be used.
NB: when a site contains no species FDis is equal to 0.
The computation of this function can be parallelized thanks to
future::plan()
. To get more information on how to parallelize your
computation please refer to the parallelization vignette with:
vignette("fundiversity_1-parallel", package = "fundiversity")
.
Laliberté, E., & Legendre, P. (2010). A distance-based framework for measuring functional diversity from multiple traits. Ecology, 91(1), 299–305. doi:10.1890/08-2244.1
data(traits_birds) data(site_sp_birds) fd_fdis(traits_birds, site_sp_birds)
data(traits_birds) data(site_sp_birds) fd_fdis(traits_birds, site_sp_birds)
This function computes Functional Divergence (FDiv) following Villéger et al.
(2008). NB: when a site contains no species FDiv is equal to 0. If for a site
there are less traits than species, then FDiv is equal to NaN
.
fd_fdiv(traits, sp_com)
fd_fdiv(traits, sp_com)
traits |
Trait matrix with species as rows and traits as columns.
It has to contain exclusively numerical values. This can be
either a |
sp_com |
Site-species matrix with sites as rows and species as columns
if not provided, the function considers all species with equal
abundance in a single site. This can be either a |
By default, when loading fundiversity, the functions to
compute convex hulls are
memoised through the memoise
package if it is installed (their results are cached to avoid recomputing the
same functional volume twice). To deactivate this behavior you can set the
option fundiversity.memoise
to FALSE
by running the following line:
options(fundiversity.memoise = FALSE)
. If you use it interactively it will
only affect your current session. Add it to your script(s) or .Rprofile
file to avoid toggling it each time. By changing the option, the behavior
will automatically change the next time you run the function. Note:
memoisation is only available when the memoise
package has been installed
and without parallelization, otherwise fundiversity
will use unmemoised
versions of the functions. In other words, memoization and parallelization
are mutually exclusive.
a data.frame with two columns:
site
the names of the sites as the row names of the input sp_com
,
FDiv
the values of functional divergence at each site.
If the sp_com
argument is not provided or if sp_com
doesn't have rownames,
arbitrary rownames s1
, s2
, s3
, etc. will be used.
NB: when a site contains no species FDiv is equal to 0. If for a site
there are less traits than species, then FDiv is equal to NaN
.
The computation of this function can be parallelized thanks to
future::plan()
. To get more information on how to parallelize your
computation please refer to the parallelization vignette with:
vignette("fundiversity_1-parallel", package = "fundiversity")
.
Villéger S., Mason N. W. H., Mouillot D. (2008), New multidimensional functional diversity indices for a multifaceted framework in functional ecology, Ecology 89(8), doi:10.1890/07-1206.1
data(traits_birds) fd_fdiv(traits_birds)
data(traits_birds) fd_fdiv(traits_birds)
This function computes Functional Evenness (FEve) following Villéger et al.
(2008). NB: By definition FEve is equal to NA
when the number of species
per site is strictly lower than 3.
fd_feve(traits = NULL, sp_com, dist_matrix = NULL)
fd_feve(traits = NULL, sp_com, dist_matrix = NULL)
traits |
Trait matrix with species as rows and traits as columns.
It has to contain exclusively numerical values. This can be
either a |
sp_com |
Site-species matrix with sites as rows and species as columns
if not provided, the function considers all species with equal
abundance in a single site. This can be either a |
dist_matrix |
A dissimilarity matrix that can be provided instead of a
trait data.frame (default: |
a data.frame with two columns:
site
character column that contains site names based on input sp_com
row names,
FEve
numeric column that contains FEve values corresponding to each site.
If the sp_com
argument is not provided or if sp_com
doesn't have rownames,
arbitrary rownames s1
, s2
, s3
, etc. will be used.
NB: By definition FEve is equal to NA
when the number of species per site
is strictly lower than 3.
The computation of this function can be parallelized thanks to
future::plan()
. To get more information on how to parallelize your
computation please refer to the parallelization vignette with:
vignette("fundiversity_1-parallel", package = "fundiversity")
.
Villéger, S., Mason, N.W.H., Mouillot, D., 2008. New Multidimensional Functional Diversity Indices for a Multifaceted Framework in Functional Ecology. Ecology 89, 2290–2301. doi:10.1890/07-1206.1
data(traits_birds) fd_feve(traits_birds)
data(traits_birds) fd_feve(traits_birds)
Functional Richness is computed as the volume of the convex hull from all
included traits following Villéger et al. (2008).
NB: FRic is equal to NA
when there are strictly less species in a site
than the number of provided traits.
fd_fric(traits, sp_com, stand = FALSE)
fd_fric(traits, sp_com, stand = FALSE)
traits |
Trait matrix with species as rows and traits as columns.
It has to contain exclusively numerical values. This can be
either a |
sp_com |
Site-species matrix with sites as rows and species as columns
if not provided, the function considers all species with equal
abundance in a single site. This can be either a |
stand |
a boolean indicating whether to standardize FRic values over
the observed maximum over all species (default: |
By default, when loading fundiversity, the functions to
compute convex hulls are
memoised through the memoise
package if it is installed (their results are cached to avoid recomputing the
same functional volume twice). To deactivate this behavior you can set the
option fundiversity.memoise
to FALSE
by running the following line:
options(fundiversity.memoise = FALSE)
. If you use it interactively it will
only affect your current session. Add it to your script(s) or .Rprofile
file to avoid toggling it each time. By changing the option, the behavior
will automatically change the next time you run the function. Note:
memoisation is only available when the memoise
package has been installed
and without parallelization, otherwise fundiversity
will use unmemoised
versions of the functions. In other words, memoization and parallelization
are mutually exclusive.
a data.frame with two columns:
site
the names of the sites as the row names of the input sp_com
,
FRic
the values of functional richness at each site.
If the sp_com
argument is not provided or if sp_com
doesn't have rownames,
arbitrary rownames s1
, s2
, s3
, etc. will be used.
NB: FRic is equal to NA
when there are strictly less species in a site
than the number of provided traits. Note that only species with strictly
different trait combinations are considered unique, species that share the
exact same trait values across all traits are considered as one species.
The computation of this function can be parallelized thanks to
future::plan()
. To get more information on how to parallelize your
computation please refer to the parallelization vignette with:
vignette("fundiversity_1-parallel", package = "fundiversity")
.
Cornwell W. K., Schwilk D. W., Ackerly D. D. (2006), A trait-based test for habitat filtering; convex hull volume, Ecology 84(6), doi:10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[1465:ATTFHF]2.0.CO;2
data(traits_birds) fd_fric(traits_birds)
data(traits_birds) fd_fric(traits_birds)
Compute volume of the intersection of the convex hulls of all pairs
of sites (including self-intersection, which corresponds to their convex
hull). Note that when standardizing convex hulls of intersections,
this function uses the convex hull of all provided traits,
thus standardized volume of self-intersection hulls can be lower than one.
NB: FRic_intersect is equal to NA
when there are strictly less species in
one of the sites than the number of provided traits.
fd_fric_intersect(traits, sp_com, stand = FALSE)
fd_fric_intersect(traits, sp_com, stand = FALSE)
traits |
Trait matrix with species as rows and traits as columns.
It has to contain exclusively numerical values. This can be
either a |
sp_com |
Site-species matrix with sites as rows and species as columns
if not provided, the function considers all species with equal
abundance in a single site. This can be either a |
stand |
a boolean indicating whether to standardize FRic values over
the observed maximum over all species (default: |
By default, when loading fundiversity, the functions to
compute convex hulls are
memoised through the memoise
package if it is installed (their results are cached to avoid recomputing the
same functional volume twice). To deactivate this behavior you can set the
option fundiversity.memoise
to FALSE
by running the following line:
options(fundiversity.memoise = FALSE)
. If you use it interactively it will
only affect your current session. Add it to your script(s) or .Rprofile
file to avoid toggling it each time. By changing the option, the behavior
will automatically change the next time you run the function. Note:
memoisation is only available when the memoise
package has been installed
and without parallelization, otherwise fundiversity
will use unmemoised
versions of the functions. In other words, memoization and parallelization
are mutually exclusive.
a data.frame with three columns:
first_site
the names of the first site used in the pair sp_com
,
second_site
the names of the first site used in the pair,
FRic_intersect
the volume of the convex hulls intersection of each
pair of site.
If the sp_com
argument is not provided or if sp_com
doesn't have rownames,
arbitrary rownames s1
, s2
, s3
, etc. will be used.
NB: FRic_intersect is equal to NA
when there are strictly less species in
one of the sites than the number of provided traits. Note that only species
with strictly different trait combinations are considered unique, species
that share the exact same trait values across all traits are considered as
one species.
The computation of this function can be parallelized thanks to
future::plan()
. To get more information on how to parallelize your
computation please refer to the parallelization vignette with:
vignette("fundiversity_1-parallel", package = "fundiversity")
.
Villéger S., Grenouillet G., Brosse S. (2013), Decomposing functional
-diversity reveals that low functional
-diversity is driven by low functional turnover in European
fish assemblages, Global Ecology and Biogeography, 22(6), 671–681.
doi:10.1111/geb.12021.
Zhao T., Villéger S., Cucherousset J. (2019). Accounting for intraspecific diversity when examining relationships between non-native species and functional diversity. Oecologia, 189(1), 171-183. doi:10.1007/s00442-018-4311-3.
fd_fric()
, geometry::intersectn()
, geometry::convhulln()
data(traits_birds) fd_fric_intersect(traits_birds)
data(traits_birds) fd_fric_intersect(traits_birds)
This function computes Rao's Quadratic Entropy following Rao (1982). NB: Rao's quadratic entropy is 0 when there are no species in the site.
fd_raoq(traits = NULL, sp_com, dist_matrix = NULL)
fd_raoq(traits = NULL, sp_com, dist_matrix = NULL)
traits |
Trait matrix with species as rows and traits as columns.
It has to contain exclusively numerical values. This can be
either a |
sp_com |
Site-species matrix with sites as rows and species as columns
if not provided, the function considers all species with equal
abundance in a single site. This can be either a |
dist_matrix |
A dissimilarity matrix that can be provided instead of a
trait data.frame (default: |
a data.frame with two columns:
site
the names of the sites as the row names of the input sp_com
,
Q
the values of Rao's quadratic entropy at each site.
If the sp_com
argument is not provided or if sp_com
doesn't have rownames,
arbitrary rownames s1
, s2
, s3
, etc. will be used.
NB: Rao's quadratic entropy is 0 when there are no species in the site.
Pavoine S., Dolédec S. (2005). The apportionment of quadratic entropy: a useful alternative for partitioning diversity in ecological data. Environmental and Ecological Statistics, 12(2), 125–138. doi:10.1007/s10651-005-1037-2
data(traits_birds) fd_raoq(traits_birds)
data(traits_birds) fd_raoq(traits_birds)
The memoisation is the convex hull computation in fundiversity is
controlled via the fundiversity.memoise
option:
if unset, the default is to use memoisation if memoise was installed when fundiversity was loaded, and not to use memoisation otherwise.
if options(fundiversity.memoise = TRUE)
, memoisation is used and an error
is thrown if memoise is not installed.
if options(fundiversity.memoise = FALSE)
, memoisation is not used.
Presences and absences of birds at different elevations along a tropical gradient. Species names are indicated as column names.
site_sp_birds
site_sp_birds
A matrix with 217 columns (1 per species) and 8 rows:
is species present at 250 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 500 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 1000 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 1500 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 2000 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 2500 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 3000 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 3500 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
Nowak, Larissa et al. (2019), Data from: Projecting consequences of global warming for the functional diversity of fleshy-fruited plants and frugivorous birds along a tropical elevational gradient, Dryad, Dataset, doi:10.5061/dryad.c0n737b
Presences and absences of plants at different elevations along a tropical gradient. Species names are indicated as column names.
site_sp_plants
site_sp_plants
A matrix with 392 columns (1 per species) and 10 rows:
is species present at 250 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 500 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 1000 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 1500 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 2000 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 2500 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 3000 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 3500 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 3750 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
is species present at 4000 m elevation? 0=No, 1=Yes
Nowak, Larissa et al. (2019), Data from: Projecting consequences of global warming for the functional diversity of fleshy-fruited plants and frugivorous birds along a tropical elevational gradient, Dryad, Dataset, doi:10.5061/dryad.c0n737b
A dataset containing some functional traits of frugivorous birds in the Manú biosphere reserve, southeast Peru. Given are species mean trait values. The row names of the dataset give species names. Morphological traits have been measured on museum specimen following Eck et al.(2011). Traits have been measured only for adult and, if possible, for a minimum of two female and two male specimens. Body mass was taken from Dunning et al. (2007).
traits_birds
traits_birds
A data frame with 217 rows and 4 variables:
bill width, in mm
bill length, in mm
Kipp's index indicating wing Pointedness
adult's bodymass, in g
Nowak, Larissa et al. (2019), Data from: Projecting consequences of global warming for the functional diversity of fleshy-fruited plants and frugivorous birds along a tropical elevational gradient, Dryad, Dataset, doi:10.5061/dryad.c0n737b
Taxonomy and functional traits of 392 fleshy-fruited plant species from the Manu National Park in south-east Peru. Given are fruit length and width (mm), plant height (m) and crop mass (g). Fruit traits have been measured on fresh fruit samples. Number of fruits per plant (used to determine the crop mass) and plant height have been estimated in the field. Species names are indicated as row names.
traits_plants
traits_plants
A data frame with 392 rows and 4 variables:
fruit length, in mm
fruit width, in mm
plant height, in m
seed mass, in g
Nowak, Larissa et al. (2019), Data from: Projecting consequences of global warming for the functional diversity of fleshy-fruited plants and frugivorous birds along a tropical elevational gradient, Dryad, Dataset, doi:10.5061/dryad.c0n737b