bai.in | R Documentation |
Convert multiple ring-width series to basal area increment (i.e., ring area) going from the pith to the bark.
bai.in(rwl, d2pith = NULL)
rwl |
a |
d2pith |
an optional |
This converts ring-width series (mm) to ring-area series (mm squared)
(aka basal area increments) based on the distance between the
innermost measured ring and the pith of the tree. It is related to
bai.out
, which calculates each ring area starting from
the outside of the tree and working inward. Both methods assume a
circular cross section (Biondi 1999). See the references below for
further details.
A data.frame
containing the ring areas for each series with
column names, row names and dimensions of rwl
.
DendroLab website: https://dendrolaborg.wordpress.com/
Code by Andy Bunn based on work from DendroLab, University of Nevada Reno, USA. Patched and improved by Mikko Korpela.
Biondi, F. (1999) Comparing tree-ring chronologies and repeated timber inventories as forest monitoring tools. Ecological Applications, 9(1), 216–227.
Biondi, F. and Qeadan, F. (2008) A theory-driven approach to tree-ring standardization: Defining the biological trend from expected basal area increment. Tree-Ring Research, 64(2), 81–96.
bai.out
library(graphics) library(stats) library(utils) ## Toy n <- 100 ## Make three fake tree-ring series to show that these funcs work on rwl objects base.series <- 0.75 + exp(-0.2 * 1:n) rwl <- data.frame(x1 = base.series + abs(rnorm(n, 0, 0.05)), x2 = base.series + abs(rnorm(n, 0, 0.05)), x3 = base.series + abs(rnorm(n, 0, 0.05))) ## The inside out method foo <- bai.in(rwl = rwl) ## The outside in method bar <- bai.out(rwl = rwl) ## Identical head(bar) head(foo) ## Use gp data data(gp.rwl) data(gp.d2pith) foo <- bai.in(rwl = gp.rwl, d2pith = gp.d2pith) foo.crn <- chron(foo) yrs <- time(foo.crn) plot(yrs, foo.crn[, 1], type = "n", xlab = "Year", ylab = expression(mm^2)) lines(yrs, foo.crn[, 1], col = "grey", lty = "dashed") lines(yrs, caps(foo.crn[, 1], nyrs = 32), col = "red", lwd = 2)