vignettes/name_cleaning.Rmd
name_cleaning.Rmd
taxize
offers interactive prompts when using
get_*()
functions (e.g., get_tsn()
). These
prompts make it easy in interactive use to select choices when there are
more than one match found.
However, to make your code reproducible you don’t want interactive prompts.
This vignette covers some options for programmatic name cleaning.
When using get_*()
functions programatically, you have a
few options.
Normally, if you get more than one result, you get a prompt asking you to select which taxon you want.
get_tsn("Quercus b")
#> tsn target commonnames nameusage
#> 1 19298 Quercus beebiana not accepted
#> 2 507263 Quercus berberidifolia scrub oak accepted
#> 3 19300 Quercus bicolor swamp white oak accepted
#> 4 19303 Quercus borealis not accepted
#> 5 195131 Quercus borealis var. maxima not accepted
#> 6 195166 Quercus boyntonii Boynton's sand post oak accepted
#> 7 506533 Quercus brantii Brant's oak accepted
#> 8 195150 Quercus breviloba not accepted
#> 9 195099 Quercus breweri not accepted
#> 10 195168 Quercus buckleyi Texas oak accepted
#>
#> More than one TSN found for taxon 'Quercus b'!
#>
#> Enter rownumber of taxon (other inputs will return 'NA'):
#>
#> 1:
Instead, we can use the rows parameter to specify which records we want by number only (not by a name itself). Here, we want the first 3 records:
get_tsn('Quercus b', rows = 1:3)
#> tsn target commonnames nameusage
#> 1 19298 Quercus beebiana not accepted
#> 2 19300 Quercus bicolor swamp white oak accepted
#> 3 19303 Quercus borealis not accepted
#>
#> More than one TSN found for taxon 'Quercus b'!
#>
#> Enter rownumber of taxon (other inputs will return 'NA'):
#>
#> 1:
However, you still get a prompt as there is more than one result.
Thus, for full programmatic usage, you can specify a single row, if you happen to know which one you want:
get_tsn('Quercus b', rows = 3)
#> ══ 1 queries ═══════════════
#> ✔ Found: Quercus b
#> ══ Results ═════════════════
#>
#> ● Total: 1
#> ● Found: 1
#> ● Not Found: 0
#> [1] "19303"
#> attr(,"class")
#> [1] "tsn"
#> attr(,"match")
#> [1] "found"
#> attr(,"multiple_matches")
#> [1] TRUE
#> attr(,"pattern_match")
#> [1] FALSE
#> attr(,"uri")
#> [1] "https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=19303"
In reality it is unlikely you’ll know which row you want, unless perhaps you just want one result from each query, regardless of what it is.
A better fit for programmatic use are underscore methods. Each
get_*()
function has a sister method with and trailing
underscore, e.g., get_tsn()
and
get_tsn_()
.
get_tsn_("Quercus b")
#> $`Quercus b`
#> # A tibble: 5 x 4
#> tsn scientificName commonNames nameUsage
#> <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr>
#> 1 19300 Quercus bicolor swamp white oak,chêne bicolore accepted
#> 2 195166 Quercus boyntonii Boynton's sand post oak,Boynton's oak accepted
#> 3 195168 Quercus buckleyi Texas oak,Buckley's oak accepted
#> 4 506533 Quercus brantii Brant's oak accepted
#> 5 507263 Quercus berberidifolia scrub oak accepted
The result is a single data.frame for each taxon queried, which can be processed downstream with whatever logic is required in your workflow.
You can also combine rows
parameter with underscore
functions, as a single number of a range of numbers:
get_tsn_("Quercus b", rows = 1)
#> $`Quercus b`
#> # A tibble: 1 x 4
#> tsn scientificName commonNames nameUsage
#> <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr>
#> 1 19300 Quercus bicolor swamp white oak,chêne bicolore accepted
get_tsn_("Quercus b", rows = 1:2)
#> $`Quercus b`
#> # A tibble: 2 x 4
#> tsn scientificName commonNames nameUsage
#> <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr>
#> 1 19300 Quercus bicolor swamp white oak,chêne bicolore accepted
#> 2 195166 Quercus boyntonii Boynton's sand post oak,Boynton's oak accepted
All get_*()
functions have associated
as.*()
functions (e.g., get_tsn()
and
as.tsn()
).
Many taxize
functions use taxonomic identifier classes
(S3 objects) that are the output of get_*()
functions.
as.*()
methods make it easy to make the required S3
taxonomic identifier classes if you already know the identifier. For
example:
Already a tsn, returns the same
as.tsn(get_tsn("Quercus douglasii"))
#> ══ 1 queries ═══════════════
#> ✔ Found: Quercus douglasii
#> ══ Results ═════════════════
#>
#> ● Total: 1
#> ● Found: 1
#> ● Not Found: 0
#> [1] "19322"
#> attr(,"class")
#> [1] "tsn"
#> attr(,"match")
#> [1] "found"
#> attr(,"multiple_matches")
#> [1] FALSE
#> attr(,"pattern_match")
#> [1] FALSE
#> attr(,"uri")
#> [1] "https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=19322"
numeric
as.tsn(c(19322, 129313, 506198))
#> [1] "19322" "129313" "506198"
#> attr(,"class")
#> [1] "tsn"
#> attr(,"match")
#> [1] "found" "found" "found"
#> attr(,"multiple_matches")
#> [1] FALSE FALSE FALSE
#> attr(,"pattern_match")
#> [1] FALSE FALSE FALSE
#> attr(,"uri")
#> [1] "https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=19322"
#> [2] "https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=129313"
#> [3] "https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=506198"
And you can do the same for character, or list inputs - depending on the data source.
The above as.tsn()
examples have the parameter
check = TRUE
, meaning we ping the data source web service
to make sure the identifier exists. You can skip that check if you like
by setting check = FALSE
, and the result is returned much
faster:
as.tsn(c("19322","129313","506198"), check = FALSE)
#> [1] "19322" "129313" "506198"
#> attr(,"class")
#> [1] "tsn"
#> attr(,"match")
#> [1] "found" "found" "found"
#> attr(,"multiple_matches")
#> [1] FALSE FALSE FALSE
#> attr(,"pattern_match")
#> [1] FALSE FALSE FALSE
#> attr(,"uri")
#> [1] "https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=19322"
#> [2] "https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=129313"
#> [3] "https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=506198"
With the output of as.*()
methods, you can then proceed
with other taxize
functions.
Some functions in taxize
are meant specifically for name
cleaning. One of those is gnr_resolve()
.
gnr_resolve()
doesn’t provide prompts as do
get_*()
functions, but instead return data.frame’s. So we
don’t face the same problem, and can use gnr_resolve()
in a
programmatic workflow straight away.
spp <- names_list(rank = "species", size = 10)
gnr_resolve(spp, preferred_data_sources = 11)
#> # A tibble: 13 x 5
#> user_supplied_na… submitted_name matched_name data_source_tit… score
#> * <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr> <dbl>
#> 1 Astragalus radka… Astragalus radk… Astragalus radkane… GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 2 Montanoa gigas Montanoa gigas Montanoa gigas Rze… GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 3 Serratula semise… Serratula semis… Serratula semiserr… GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 4 Serratula semise… Serratula semis… Serratula semiserr… GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 5 Delosperma pagea… Delosperma page… Delosperma pageanu… GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 6 Delosperma pagea… Delosperma page… Delosperma pageanu… GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 7 Zieria hydroscop… Zieria hydrosco… Zieria hydroscopic… GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 8 Baccharis flabel… Baccharis flabe… Baccharis flabella… GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 9 Piper gonocarpum Piper gonocarpum Piper gonocarpum T… GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 10 Lathraea japonica Lathraea japoni… Lathraea japonica … GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 11 Lathraea japonica Lathraea japoni… Lathraea japonica … GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 12 Lathraea japonica Lathraea japoni… Lathraea japonica … GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
#> 13 Verbesina tachir… Verbesina tachi… Verbesina tachiren… GBIF Backbone T… 0.988
Some other functions in taxize
use get_*()
functions internally (e.g., classification()
), but you can
can generally pass on parameters to the get_*()
functions
internally.
Let us know if you have ideas for better ways to do programmatic name cleaning at https://github.com/ropensci/taxize/issues or https://discuss.ropensci.org/ !