sdmApp package: A user-friendly application for species distribution modeling

Aboubacar HEMA, Babacar NDAO, Louise LEROUX, Abdoul Aziz DIOUF

2021-07-06

Introduction and Main Features

sdmApp is a R package containing a Shiny application that allows non-expert R users to easily model species distribution. It offers a reproducible work flow for species distribution modeling into a single and user friendly environment. sdmApp takes Raster data (in format supported by the Raster package) and species occurrence data (several format supported) as input argument. This package provides an interactive graphical user interface (GUI). This document will give an overview of the main functionalities of the graphical user interface. The main features of the GUI is:

The GUI is build around 5 main windows, which can be selected from the navigation bar at the top of the screen. Initially, some of these windows will be empty and their content changes once data (both raster and species occurrence files) have been uploaded.

Installation

The sdmApp is available both GitHub and CRAN . It is recommended to install the dependencies of the package.

To install the package from GitHub use:

remotes::install_github("Abson-dev/sdmApp", dependencies = TRUE)

Or installing from CRAN:

install.packages("sdmApp", dependencies = TRUE)
# loading the package
library(sdmApp)
# Graphical User Interface (GUI)
sdmApp()

Package data

Occurence data

It is a dataset of 9258 trees georeferenced encompassing 3 (Faidherbia albida,Balanites aegyptiaca and Anogeissus leiocarpus) species (Ndao et al., 2019).

Environmental Variables

These are a suite of 34 variables relating to bioclimatic drivers, soil properties, water productivity, vegetation phenology and productivity, watersheds topography. We preprocessed the environmental variables by setting them on the same projection system (WGS 84, UTM, Zone 28N), cropping them with the same extent and resampling them at the same spatial resolution of 250 m.

Bioclimatic variables

Bioclimatic variables are derived from the monthly temperature and rainfall values in order to generate more biologically meaningful variables. They represent annual trends (e.g., mean annual temperature, annual precipitation) seasonality (e.g., annual range in temperature and precipitation) and extreme or limiting environmental factors (e.g., temperature of the coldest and warmest month, and precipitation of the wet and dry quarters (1/4 of the year)). The bioclimatic variables we used was extracted from the worldclim database version 2 (http://www.worldclim.com/). They are the average for the years 1970-2000 (Fick & Hijmans, 2017) .

Soil properties

We used 7 variables of soil properties from the ISRIC - World Soil Information portal (https://www.isric.org/projects/soil-property-maps-africa-250-m-resolution). The dataset results from the “Mapping soil properties of Africa at 250 m Resolution” produced from the Africa Soil Information Service (AfSIS) project. Over 85 thousand samples (over 28 thousand sampling locations), covering the Period 1950–2012, were used for spatial predictions of soil properties (Hengl et al., 2015) .

Water productivity

Two variables of water productivity were retrieved from the FAO WaPOR database (https://wapor.apps.fao.org/home/1) i.e the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) portal to monitor Water Productivity through Open access of Remotely sensed derived data The Net biomass water productivity (NBWP) expresses the quantity of output (total biomass production) in relation to the volume of water beneficially consumed (through canopy transpiration) in the year, and thus net of soil evaporation. The actual evapotranspiration and interception (AETI) represents the sum of the soil evaporation (E), the canopy transpiration (T) and the interception (I) i.e the rainfall intercepted by the leaves of the plants that will be directly evaporated from their surface (FAO, 2020) . NBWP and AETI are also agrometeorological variables particularly useful in monitoring how effectively vegetation uses water to develop biomass (NBWP) and for analyzing the soil-air interface and plant functioning (AETI – WMO, 2012)

Vegetation phenology and productivity

AFS were described as lanscapes with interactions between crops, trees and crop practices. That is why we integrated two phenological metrics related to the season of crop in order to take into account interactions with species distribution. We derived the phenological metrics from normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) time series such as 16-day MODIS NDVI time series (MOD13Q1) using timesat software (Eklundh & Jönsson, 2011).

Watersheds topography

Topographic variables were derived from the Soil & Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) using the 30 m NASA SRTM digital elevation model (https://dwtkns.com/srtm30m/). SWAT is a small watershed to river basin-scale model used to simulate the quality and quantity of surface and ground water and predict the environmental impact of land use, land management practices, and climate change (https://swat.tamu.edu/). We used the watershed delineator of SWAT which allows to delineate sub-watersheds within the study area (Winchell et al., 2010) . We extracted 69 sub-basins in a vector file format with their attribute table including topographic variables values.

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