tsallis find Tsallis diversities with any scale or the corresponding evenness measures. Function tsallisaccum finds these statistics with accumulating sites.tsallis(x, scales = seq(0, 2, 0.2), norm = FALSE, hill = FALSE)
tsallisaccum(x, scales = seq(0, 2, 0.2), permutations = 100, raw = FALSE, ...)
## S3 method for class 'tsallisaccum':
persp(x, theta = 220, phi = 15, col = heat.colors(100), zlim, ...)TRUE diversity values are normalized by their maximum (diversity value at equiprobability conditions).FALSE then return summary statistics of permutations, and if TRUE then returns the individual permutations.theta gives the azimuthal direction and phi the colatitude.tsallis and to graphical functions.tsallis returns a data frame of selected indices. Function tsallisaccum with argument raw = FALSE returns a three-dimensional array, where the first dimension are the accumulated sites, second dimension are the diversity scales, and third dimension are the summary statistics mean, stdev, min, max, Qnt 0.025 and Qnt 0.975. With argument raw = TRUE the statistics on the third dimension are replaced with individual permutation results.diversity).
If norm = TRUE, tsallis gives values normalized by the maximum:
$$H_q(max) = \frac{S^{1-q}-1}{1-q}$$
where $S$ is the number of species. As $q$ tends to 1, maximum is defined as $ln(S)$.
If hill = TRUE, tsallis gives Hill numbers (numbers equivalents, see Jost 2007):
$$D_q = (1-(q-1) H)^{1/(1-q)}$$
Details on plotting methods and accumulating values can be found on the help pages of the functions renyi and renyiaccum.renyi and renyiaccum. An object of class 'tsallisaccum' can be used with function rgl.renyiaccum as well. See also settings for persp.data(BCI)
i <- sample(nrow(BCI), 12)
x1 <- tsallis(BCI[i,])
x1
diversity(BCI[i,],"simpson") == x1[["2"]]
plot(x1)
x2 <- tsallis(BCI[i,],norm=TRUE)
x2
plot(x2)
mod1 <- tsallisaccum(BCI[i,])
plot(mod1, as.table=TRUE, col = c(1, 2, 2))
persp(mod1)
mod2 <- tsallisaccum(BCI[i,], norm=TRUE)
persp(mod2,theta=100,phi=30)Run the code above in your browser using DataLab