Our next Community Call, on March 27th, aims to help people learn about using rOpenSci’s R packages to access and analyze taxonomy and biodiversity data, and to recognize the breadth and depth of their applications. We also aim to learn from the discussion how we might improve these tools. Presentations will start with an introduction to the topic and details on some specific packages and we’ll hear from several people about their “use cases in the wild”.
Margaret Siple - using taxize to get IUCN statuses for species found via DNA barcoding of seafood samples and compare them among genera (4 min)
Kathryn Turner - a use case for taxize and rgbif to get all available occurrence records from GBIF for a handful of species, and scaling up to several thousand (4 min)
Kari Norman - learning lessons in building taxadb, a local database approach for working with taxonomic names (4 min)
Ciera Martinez - exploring biodiversity data with undergraduate data scientists using taxize and database specific tools like neotomoa, paleoDB, and rglobi (4 min)
Q & A (20 min)
🎤 See speaker bios below.
Join the Call
🕘 Wednesday, March 27th, 2-3PM PDT; 9-10PM GMT; March 28th in Australia, 8-9AM AEDT (find your timezone)
☎️ Find details for joining on our Community Calls page. Everyone is welcome. No RSVP needed.
🎥 After the Call, we’ll post the video and notes from the Q & A.
Resources
The Taxonomy Task View lists some relevant packages (not exclusive to rOpenSci).
Foster, Z. S., Chamberlain, S., & Grünwald, N. J. (2018). Taxa: An R package implementing data standards and methods for taxonomic data. F1000Research, 7, 272. https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.14013.2
Foster, Z. S., Sharpton, T. J., & Grünwald, N. J. (2017). Metacoder: An R package for visualization and manipulation of community taxonomic diversity data. PLoS computational biology, 13(2), e1005404. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005404
We’ve tried to make it easy for you to tell us about how you have used our packages. Go to the UseCases category in our public forum. Starting a “New Topic” opens a template that suggests what to provide, like the name of the rOpenSci tool or resource you used, a link to a post or code snippet, and a few other optional things. We might share your use case during the Call or tweet about it, so be sure to give your twitter handle.
Have a question for the speakers?
Add yours to the comments below. See a question you’d like to have answered? Give it a ❤️. The moderator may select some of these questions to ask during Q & A.
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