set_dispersal {slendr} | R Documentation |
Change dispersal parameters
Description
Changes either the competition interactive distance, mating choice distance, or the dispersal of offspring from its parent
Usage
set_dispersal(
pop,
time,
competition = NA,
mating = NA,
dispersal = NA,
dispersal_fun = NULL
)
Arguments
pop |
Object of the class |
time |
Time of the population size change |
competition , mating |
Maximum spatial competition and mating choice distance |
dispersal |
Standard deviation of the normal distribution of the distance that offspring disperses from its parent |
dispersal_fun |
Distribution function governing the dispersal of offspring. One of "normal", "uniform", "cauchy", "exponential", or "brownian" (in which vertical and horizontal displacements are drawn from a normal distribution independently). |
Value
Object of the class slendr_pop
, which contains population
parameters such as name, time of appearance in the simulation, parent
population (if any), and its spatial parameters such as map and spatial
boundary.
Examples
# spatial definitions -----------------------------------------------------
# create a blank abstract world 1000x1000 distance units in size
map <- world(xrange = c(0, 1000), yrange = c(0, 1000), landscape = "blank")
# create a circular population with the center of a population boundary at
# [200, 800] and a radius of 100 distance units, 1000 individuals at time 1
# occupying a map just specified
pop1 <- population("pop1", N = 1000, time = 1,
map = map, center = c(200, 800), radius = 100)
# printing a population object to a console shows a brief summary
pop1
# create another population occupying a polygon range, splitting from pop1
# at a given time point (note that specifying a map is not necessary because
# it is "inherited" from the parent)
pop2 <- population("pop2", N = 100, time = 50, parent = pop1,
polygon = list(c(100, 100), c(320, 30), c(500, 200),
c(500, 400), c(300, 450), c(100, 400)))
pop3 <- population("pop3", N = 200, time = 80, parent = pop2,
center = c(800, 800), radius = 200)
# move "pop1" to another location along a specified trajectory and saved the
# resulting object to the same variable (the number of intermediate spatial
# snapshots can be also determined automatically by leaving out the
# `snapshots = ` argument)
pop1_moved <- move(pop1, start = 100, end = 200, snapshots = 6,
trajectory = list(c(600, 820), c(800, 400), c(800, 150)))
pop1_moved
# many slendr functions are pipe-friendly, making it possible to construct
# pipelines which construct entire history of a population
pop1 <- population("pop1", N = 1000, time = 1,
map = map, center = c(200, 800), radius = 100) %>%
move(start = 100, end = 200, snapshots = 6,
trajectory = list(c(400, 800), c(600, 700), c(800, 400), c(800, 150))) %>%
set_range(time = 300, polygon = list(
c(400, 0), c(1000, 0), c(1000, 600), c(900, 400), c(800, 250),
c(600, 100), c(500, 50))
)
# population ranges can expand by a given distance in all directions
pop2 <- expand_range(pop2, by = 200, start = 50, end = 150, snapshots = 3)
# we can check the positions of all populations interactively by plotting their
# ranges together on a single map
plot_map(pop1, pop2, pop3)
# gene flow events --------------------------------------------------------
# individual gene flow events can be saved to a list
gf <- list(
gene_flow(from = pop1, to = pop3, start = 150, end = 200, rate = 0.15),
gene_flow(from = pop1, to = pop2, start = 300, end = 330, rate = 0.25)
)
# compilation -------------------------------------------------------------
# compile model components in a serialized form to dist, returning a single
# slendr model object (in practice, the resolution should be smaller)
model <- compile_model(
populations = list(pop1, pop2, pop3), generation_time = 1,
resolution = 100, simulation_length = 500,
competition = 5, mating = 5, dispersal = 1
)