The hardware and bandwidth for this mirror is donated by METANET, the Webhosting and Full Service-Cloud Provider.
If you wish to report a bug, or if you are interested in having us mirror your free-software or open-source project, please feel free to contact us at mirror[@]metanet.ch.
There are four different “levels” of the hierarchy in Soil Taxonomy that are represented by letter codes:
In the SoilTaxonomy package the level
argument
is used by some functions to specify output for a target level within
the hierarchy. Other functions determine level
by
comparison against known taxa or codes. This vignette covers the basics
of how taxon letter code conversion to and from taxonomic names is
implemented.
library(SoilTaxonomy)
taxon_to_taxon_code()
taxon_to_taxon_code()
converts a taxon name (Soil Order,
Suborder, Great Group, or Subgroup) to a letter code that corresponds to
the logical position of that taxon in the Keys to Soil Taxonomy.
Gelisols are the first Soil Order to key out and are given letter code “A”
taxon_to_taxon_code("gelisols")
#> gelisols
#> "A"
The number of letters in a taxon code corresponds to the
level
of that taxon. Histels are the first
Suborder to key out in the Gelisols key (A),
so they are given two letter code “AA”
taxon_to_taxon_code("histels")
#> histels
#> "AA"
For each “step” in each key, the letter codes are “incremented” by one.
Glacistels are the second Great Group in the Histels key (AA), so they have the three letter code “AAB”.
taxon_to_taxon_code("glacistels")
#> glacistels
#> "AAB"
Typic subgroups, by convention, are the last subgroup to key out in a Great Group.
taxon_to_taxon_code("typic glacistels")
#> typic glacistels
#> "AABC"
Since Typic Glacistels have code "AABC"
we can
infer that there are three taxa in the Glacistels key with
codes "AABA"
, "AABB"
and
"AABC"
This follows for Great Groups with many more subgroups. In case a Great Group has more than 26 subgroups within it, a fifth lowercase letter code is used to “extend” the ability to increment the code beyond 26.
An example of where this is needed is in the Haploxerolls
key where the Typic subgroup has code "IFFZh"
.
taxon_to_taxon_code("typic haploxerolls")
#> typic haploxerolls
#> "IFFZh"
From this code we infer that the Haploxerolls key has \(26+8=34\) subgroups corresponding to the
range from IFFA
to IFFZ
plus
IFFZa
to IFFZh
.
taxon_code_to_taxon()
We can use a vector of letter codes to do the inverse operation with
taxon_code_to_taxon()
.
Above we determined the Glacistels Key contains three taxa
with codes "AABA"
, "AABB"
and
"AABC"
. Let’s convert those codes to taxon names.
taxon_code_to_taxon(c("AABA", "AABB", "AABC"))
#> AABA AABB AABC
#> "Hemic Glacistels" "Sapric Glacistels" "Typic Glacistels"
taxon_to_level()
We can infer from the length of the four-letter codes that all of the
above are subgroup-level taxa. taxon_to_level()
confirms
this.
taxon_to_level(c("Hemic Glacistels","Sapric Glacistels","Typic Glacistels"))
#> [1] "subgroup" "subgroup" "subgroup"
taxon_to_level()
can also identify a fifth (lower-level)
family tier (level="family"
). Soil family
differentiae are not handled in the Order to Subgroup keys. Family names
are defined by concatenating comma-separated class names on to the
subgroup. Classes used in family names are determined by specific keys
and apply variably depending on the subgroup-level taxonomy.
For instance, the soil family
"Fine, mixed, semiactive, mesic Ultic Haploxeralfs"
includes a particle-size class ("fine"
), a mineralogy class
("mixed"
), a cation exchange capacity (CEC) activity class
("semiactive"
) and a temperature class
("mesic"
)
taxon_to_level("Fine, mixed, semiactive, mesic Ultic Haploxeralfs")
#> [1] "family"
getTaxonAtLevel()
A wrapper method around taxon letter code functionality is
getTaxonAtLevel()
.
Say that you have family-level taxon above and you want to determine
the taxonomy at a higher (less detailed) level. You can determine what
to remove (family and subgroup-level modifiers) to get the Great Group
using getTaxonAtLevel(level="greatgroup")
getTaxonAtLevel("Fine, mixed, semiactive, mesic Ultic Haploxeralfs", level = "greatgroup")
#> Fine, mixed, semiactive, mesic Ultic Haploxeralfs
#> "haploxeralfs"
If you request a more-detailed taxonomic level than what you start
with, you will get an NA
result.
For example, we request the subgroup from suborder
("Folists"
) level taxon name which is undefined.
getTaxonAtLevel("Folists", level = "subgroup")
#> Folists
#> NA
getParentTaxa()
Another wrapper method around taxon letter code functionality is
getParentTaxa()
. This function will enumerate the tiers
above a particular taxon.
getParentTaxa("Fine, mixed, semiactive, mesic Ultic Haploxeralfs")
#> $`Fine, mixed, semiactive, mesic Ultic Haploxeralfs`
#> J JD JDG
#> "Alfisols" "Xeralfs" "Haploxeralfs"
#> JDGR
#> "Ultic Haploxeralfs"
You can alternately specify code
argument instead of
taxon
.
getParentTaxa(code = "BAB")
#> $BAB
#> B BA
#> "Histosols" "Folists"
And converting the internally used taxon codes to taxon names can be
disabled with convert = FALSE
. This may be useful for
certain applications.
getParentTaxa(code = c("BAA","BAB"), convert = FALSE)
#> $BAA
#> [1] "B" "BA"
#>
#> $BAB
#> [1] "B" "BA"
decompose_taxon_code()
For more general cases decompose_taxon_code()
might be
useful. This is a function used by many of the above methods that
returns a nested list result containing the letter code hierarchy.
decompose_taxon_code(c("BAA","BAB"))
#> $BAA
#> $BAA[[1]]
#> [1] "B"
#>
#> $BAA[[2]]
#> [1] "BA"
#>
#> $BAA[[3]]
#> [1] "BAA"
#>
#>
#> $BAB
#> $BAB[[1]]
#> [1] "B"
#>
#> $BAB[[2]]
#> [1] "BA"
#>
#> $BAB[[3]]
#> [1] "BAB"
preceding_taxon_codes()
and
relative_taxon_code_position()
Other functions useful for comparing relative positions within Keys,
or the number of “steps” that it takes to reach a particular taxon, are
preceding_taxon_codes()
and
relative_taxon_code_position()
.
preceding_taxon_codes()
returns a list of vectors
containing all preceding codes.
For example, the AA
suborder key precedes
AB
. And within the AB
key ABA
and
ABB
precede ABC
.
preceding_taxon_codes("ABC")
#> $ABC
#> [1] "AA" "ABA" "ABB"
relative_taxon_code_position()
counts how many taxa key
out before a taxon plus \(1\) (to get
the taxon position).
relative_taxon_code_position(c("A","AA","AAA","AAAA",
"AB","AAB","ABA","ABC",
"B","BA","BAA","BAB",
"BBA","BBB","BBC"))
#> A AA AAA AAAA AB AAB ABA ABC B BA BAA BAB BBA BBB BBC
#> 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 4 2 2 2 3 3 4 5
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.