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isocalcR

License: GPL-3

      The goal of isocalcR is to provide a suite of user-friendly, open source functions for commonly performed calculations when working with stable isotope data. A major goal of isocalcR is to help eliminate errors associated with data compilation necessary for many standard calculations, as well as to provide the scientific community with a reliable, easily accessible resource for reproducible work. Part of this effort includes best practices of data usage, as the user is not required to download atmospheric CO2 or atmospheric δ13CO2 data for the workhorse calculations, but instead relies on published, peer-reviewed, and recommended publicly available data (Belmecheri and Lavergne, 2020). isocalcR is not meant to replace an understanding of the underlying physiological mechanisms related to these calculations, but instead to streamline the process. At present, calculations for years 0 C.E. - 2022 C.E. are stable and will work with all functions, with 2023 being added at the end of the year.

      isocalcR 0.0.1 and isocalcR 0.0.2 incorporated photorespiratory processes into calculations where Ci was computed. isocalcR 0.1.0 added the option to specify the formulation used in calculating physiological indices where Ci is necessary for calculations (i.e. CiCa, diffCaCi, iWUE). Furthermore, isocalcR 0.1.0 added the function “custom.calc”, which allows the user to specify variables such as atmospheric [CO2], that are automatically determined in other functions. The current release version of isocalcR, 0.1.1, updates the reference dataset for atmospheric CO2 and δ13CO2 to include 2022 values.

      Please cite isocalcR as: Mathias, J.M., & Hudiburg, T.W. (2022). isocalcR: An R package to streamline and standardize stable isotope calculations in ecological research. Global Change Biology, 28, 7428– 7436. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16407.

Installation

You can install the released version of isocalcR from CRAN with:

install.packages("isocalcR")

And the development version from GitHub with:

# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("justinmathias/isocalcR")

Functionality

isocalcR Function Description
d13C.to.D13C Calculate leaf carbon isotope discrimination (∆13C) given plant tissue δ13C signature (‰)
d13C.to.Ci Calculate leaf intercellular CO2 concentration (ppm) given plant tissue δ13C signature (‰)
d13C.to.CiCa Calculate the ratio of leaf intercellular CO2 to atmospheric CO2 concentration (ppm) given plant tissue δ13C signature (‰)
d13C.to.diffCaCi Calculate the difference between atmospheric CO2 concentration (ppm) and leaf intercellular CO2 concentration (ppm) given plant tissue δ13C signature (‰)
d13C.to.iWUE Calculate leaf intrinsic water use efficiency (µmol CO2 mol H2O-1) given plant tissue δ13C signature (‰)
custom.calc Calculate ∆13C, Ci, CiCa, diffCaCi, or iWUE given plant tissue δ13C signature (‰)


Examples

Calculate leaf intrinsic water use efficiency from leaf δ13C:

library(isocalcR) #Load the package
library(tidyverse) #Load the tidyverse
#> ── Attaching packages ─────────────────────────────────────── tidyverse 1.3.2 ──
#> ✔ ggplot2 3.4.0      ✔ purrr   0.3.4 
#> ✔ tibble  3.1.8      ✔ dplyr   1.0.10
#> ✔ tidyr   1.2.1      ✔ stringr 1.4.1 
#> ✔ readr   2.1.2      ✔ forcats 0.5.2 
#> ── Conflicts ────────────────────────────────────────── tidyverse_conflicts() ──
#> ✖ dplyr::filter() masks stats::filter()
#> ✖ dplyr::lag()    masks stats::lag()

#Calculate iWUE from leaf organic material with a δ13C signature of -27 ‰ for the year 2015, 300 meters above sea level at 25°C.
d13C.to.iWUE(d13C.plant = -27, 
             year = 2015, 
             elevation = 300, 
             temp = 25) 
#> [1] 87.58236

#Use custom.calc to calculate iWUE from the same leaf sample as above.
custom.calc(d13C.plant = -27,
            d13C.atm = -8.44,
            outvar = "iWUE",
            Ca = 399.62,
            elevation = 300,
            temp = 25)
#> [1] 87.58236

#Calculate the ratio of leaf intercellular to atmospheric CO2 (Ci/Ca) using the simple formulation for leaf and wood. Internally updates apparent fractionation by Rubisco, b, according to Cernusak and Ubierna 2022.
d13C.to.CiCa(d13C.plant = -27,
             year = 2015,
             elevation = 300,
             temp = 25,
             tissue = "leaf")
#> [1] 0.6493374

d13C.to.CiCa(d13C.plant = -27,
             year = 2015,
             elevation = 300,
             temp = 25,
             tissue = "wood")
#> [1] 0.6954988

#Calculate iWUE using the "simple", "photorespiration", and "mesophyll" formulations.
d13C.to.iWUE(d13C.plant = -28,
             year = 2015,
             elevation = 300,
             temp = 15,
             method = "simple")
#> [1] 75.99569

d13C.to.iWUE(d13C.plant = -28,
             year = 2015,
             elevation = 300,
             temp = 15,
             method = "photorespiration")
#> [1] 75.35815

d13C.to.iWUE(d13C.plant = -28,
             year = 2015,
             elevation = 300,
             temp = 15,
             method = "mesophyll")
#> [1] 44.00744

Data for atmospheric CO2 and atmospheric δ13CO2 for the period 0 C.E. to 2021 C.E. can be loaded and viewed. Data are from Belmecheri and Lavergne (2020).

data(CO2data) #Load CO2data into your environment

head(CO2data, 10) #View initial CO2data observations
#>    yr     Ca d13C.atm
#> 1   0 277.63    -6.41
#> 2   1 277.63    -6.41
#> 3   2 277.64    -6.41
#> 4   3 277.64    -6.41
#> 5   4 277.65    -6.41
#> 6   5 277.66    -6.41
#> 7   6 277.66    -6.41
#> 8   7 277.67    -6.41
#> 9   8 277.67    -6.41
#> 10  9 277.68    -6.41

tail(CO2data, 10) #View most recent CO2data observations
#>        yr       Ca  d13C.atm
#> 2014 2013 395.1600 -8.390000
#> 2015 2014 397.5400 -8.420000
#> 2016 2015 399.6200 -8.440000
#> 2017 2016 402.8200 -8.517840
#> 2018 2017 404.3096 -8.538528
#> 2019 2018 406.1517 -8.536936
#> 2020 2019 408.8255 -8.579904
#> 2021 2020 411.0815 -8.591044
#> 2022 2021 413.0753 -8.594226
#> 2023 2022 415.0163 -8.656291

Data for piru13C can loaded, viewed, and used to calculate iWUE for each formulation. Data are from Mathias and Thomas (2018).

data(piru13C)
head(piru13C)
#> # A tibble: 6 × 6
#> # Groups:   Year [2]
#>    Year Site  wood.d13C MGT_C Elevation_m  frac
#>   <dbl> <chr>     <dbl> <dbl>       <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1  1940 CGL       -23.2  17.4        1206     2
#> 2  1940 MCG       -24.0  17.4        1060     2
#> 3  1940 SOR       -24.5  17.4        1033     2
#> 4  1941 CGL       -22.9  18.6        1206     2
#> 5  1941 MCG       -23.6  18.6        1060     2
#> 6  1941 SOR       -24.4  18.6        1033     2


#Calculate iWUE from tree ring (wholewood) d13C from Mathias and Thomas (2018) 
#using previously loaded piru13C data

#First drop years where there are no data
piru13C <- piru13C %>% 
  drop_na() 

#Calculate iWUE for each case using 'mapply'
piru13C$iWUE_simple <- mapply(d13C.to.iWUE, #Call the function
                              d13C.plant = piru13C$wood.d13C, #Assign the plant d13C value
                              year = piru13C$Year, #Assign the year to match atmospheric CO2 and atmospheric d13CO2
                              elevation = piru13C$Elevation_m, #Assign the elevation
                              temp = piru13C$MGT_C, #Assign the temperature 
                              method = "simple", #Specify the method
                              tissue = "wood") #Specify which tissue the sample is from

piru13C$iWUE_photorespiration <- mapply(d13C.to.iWUE, #Call the function
                                        d13C.plant = piru13C$wood.d13C, #Assign the plant d13C value
                                        year = piru13C$Year, #Assign the year to match atmospheric CO2 and atmospheric d13CO2
                                        elevation = piru13C$Elevation_m, #Specify elevation
                                        temp = piru13C$MGT_C, #Specify the temperature during tissue formation
                                        method = "photorespiration", #Specify the iWUE calculation formulation
                                        frac = piru13C$frac) #Specify any post-photosynthetic fractionations. In this case 2 permille to account for leaf to wood.

piru13C$iWUE_mesophyll <- mapply(d13C.to.iWUE, #Call the function
                                        d13C.plant = piru13C$wood.d13C, #Assign the plant d13C value
                                        year = piru13C$Year, #Assign the year to match atmospheric CO2 and atmospheric d13CO2
                                        elevation = piru13C$Elevation_m, #Specify elevation
                                        temp = piru13C$MGT_C, #Specify the temperature during tissue formation
                                        method = "mesophyll", #Specify the iWUE calculation formulation
                                        frac = piru13C$frac) #Specify any post-photosynthetic fractionations. In this case 2 permille to account for leaf to wood.

#Create dataframe for visualizing differences in computed iWUE among the three formulations
piru13C_long <- piru13C %>%
  select(Year, Site, iWUE_simple, iWUE_photorespiration, iWUE_mesophyll) %>% #Select only columns of interest
  rename(Simple = iWUE_simple,
         Photorespiration = iWUE_photorespiration,
         Mesophyll = iWUE_mesophyll) %>% 
  pivot_longer(names_to = "Formulation", values_to = "iWUE", -c(Year, Site))

#Visually examine differences in iWUE based on the formulation used for each study location
ggplot(data = piru13C_long, aes(x = Year, y = iWUE, color = Formulation)) +
  geom_point(alpha = 0.5) +
  geom_smooth(aes(group = Formulation), color = "gray30") +
  theme_classic() +
  facet_wrap(~Site) +
  ylab(expression("iWUE (µmol mol"^{-1}*")")) 
#> `geom_smooth()` using method = 'loess' and formula = 'y ~ x'

Literature cited

Badeck, F.-W., Tcherkez, G., Nogués, S., Piel, C. & Ghashghaie, J. (2005). Post-photosynthetic fractionation of stable carbon isotopes between plant organs—a widespread phenomenon. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom., 19, 1381–1391.

Belmecheri, S. & Lavergne, A. (2020). Compiled records of atmospheric CO2 concentrations and stable carbon isotopes to reconstruct climate and derive plant ecophysiological indices from tree rings. Dendrochronologia, 63, 125748.

Bernacchi, C.J., Singsaas, E.L., Pimentel, C., Portis Jr, A.R. & Long, S.P. (2001). Improved temperature response functions for models of Rubisco-limited photosynthesis. Plant, Cell Environ., 24, 253–259.

Craig, H. (1953). The geochemistry of the stable carbon isotopes. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 3, 53–92.

Cernusak, L. A. & Ubierna, N. Carbon Isotope Effects in Relation to CO2 Assimilation by Tree Canopies. in Stable Isotopes in Tree Rings: inferring physiological, climatic, and environmental responses 291–310 (2022).

Davies, J.A. & Allen, C.D. (1973). Equilibrium, Potential and Actual Evaporation from Cropped Surfaces in Southern Ontario. J. Appl. Meteorol., 12, 649–657.

Farquhar, G., O’Leary, M. & Berry, J. (1982). On the relationship between carbon isotope discrimination and the intercellular carbon dioxide concentration in leaves. Aust. J. Plant Physiol., 9, 121–137.

Frank, D.C., Poulter, B., Saurer, M., Esper, J., Huntingford, C., Helle, G., et al. (2015). Water-use efficiency and transpiration across European forests during the Anthropocene. Nat. Clim. Chang., 5, 579–583.

Gong, X. Y. et al. Overestimated gains in water‐use efficiency by global forests. Glob. Chang. Biol. 1–12 (2022)

Lavergne, A. et al. Global decadal variability of plant carbon isotope discrimination and its link to gross primary production. Glob. Chang. Biol. 28, 524–541 (2022).

Ma, W. T. et al. Accounting for mesophyll conductance substantially improves 13C-based estimates of intrinsic water-use efficiency. New Phytol. 229, 1326–1338 (2021).

Mathias, J. M. & Thomas, R. B. Disentangling the effects of acidic air pollution, atmospheric CO2 , and climate change on recent growth of red spruce trees in the Central Appalachian Mountains. Glob. Chang. Biol. 24, 3938–3953 (2018).

Tsilingiris, P.T. (2008). Thermophysical and transport properties of humid air at temperature range between 0 and 100°C. Energy Convers. Manag., 49, 1098–1110.

Ubierna, N. & Farquhar, G.D. (2014). Advances in measurements and models of photosynthetic carbon isotope discrimination in C3 plants. Plant. Cell Environ., 37, 1494–1498.

These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
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