- Overview
- Features
- Installation
- First steps
- Long-form documentation (=vignettes)
- Citation
- Contributing
- Acknowledgments
- References
The package funbiogeo
aims to help users with analyses in functional
biogeography (Violle et al. 2014), the biogeography of
species’ traits, by loading and combining data, computing trait
coverage, drawing maps, correlating them with the environment, and
upscaling assemblages. It is aimed at first-timers of functional
biogeography as well as more experienced users who want to obtain quick
and easy exploratory plots.
Below is a quick introduction to the main features of funbiogeo
, if
you want some more details about them, check our
vignettes.
funbiogeo
offers:
- Standardized functions to filter and select your data for further analyses,
- Pleasing default diagnostic plots to visualize the structure of your data,
- Extensive documentation (multiple vignettes, well-documented functions, real-life example dataset) to guide you through functional biogeography analyses,
- Nice default plotting functions fully compatible with the outputs of
functional diversity packages (
betapart
,fundiversity
,hillR
,mFD
, etc.), - Automated standardized report that provide analyses and plots of your data,
- Functions to easily “upscale” your data to coarser spatial resolutions.
For the moment funbiogeo
is not on CRAN but you can install the
development version from GitHub as follow:
# install.packages("remotes") # Run this line if 'remotes' pkg is not installed
remotes::install_github("FRBCesab/funbiogeo")
This section will show you some useful functions from funbiogeo
. For a
longer introduction please refer to the “Get started”
vignette.
The package contains default example data named woodiv_traits
,
woodiv_site_species
, and woodiv_locations
all from the WOODIV
database (Monnet et al. 2021). You can, for example,
visualize the completeness of your trait dataset (which traits are known
for which proportion of species) using the
fb_plot_species_traits_completeness()
function:
fb_plot_species_traits_completeness(woodiv_traits)
One other useful visualization is to see the trait coverage of each
trait across all sites, using the function
fb_map_site_traits_completeness()
:
fb_map_site_traits_completeness(woodiv_locations, woodiv_site_species, woodiv_traits)
See more features of funbiogeo
in the vignettes of the
package
funbiogeo
provides four vignettes to explain its functioning:
- A “Get started” vignette that describes its core features and guide you through a typical analysis.
- A vignette on all diagnostic plots provided in the package, which details how to use each plotting function and how to interpret their output.
- A vignette on the data
format
that
funbiogeo
needs, which shows you the use of specific functions to format your data to work well withinfunbiogeo
. - A vignette on data
upscaling
which explains how to leverage
funbiogeo
to aggregate automatically your data to coarser grain and use them in further analyses.
For the moment funbiogeo
doesn’t offer a companion paper nor is it on
CRAN. But if you happen to use it in your paper you can cite the package
through:
Casajus N & Grenié M (2024). funbiogeo: Functional Biogeography Analyses. R package version 0.0.0.9000, https://github.com/frbcesab/funbiogeo.
You can also run:
citation("funbiogeo")
All types of contributions are encouraged and valued. For more information, check out our Contributor Guidelines.
Please note that the funbiogeo
project is released with a Contributor
Code of
Conduct.
By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms.
This package has been developed for the FRB-CESAB working group FREE and its followup FREE 2 that aims to advance the concept of functional rarity and examine the causes and consequences of functional rarity from local to global scales.
Monnet, AC., Cilleros, K., Médail, F. et al. WOODIV, a database of occurrences, functional traits, and phylogenetic data for all Euro-Mediterranean trees. Sci Data 8, 89 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-021-00873-3
Violle C, Reich, PB Pacala SW, et al. (2014) The emergence and promise of functional biogeography. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 111, 13690–13696. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1415442111