You are interested in understanding whether sexual size dimorphism is a general pattern in birds.
Download and import a large publicly available dataset of bird size measures created by Lislevand et al. 2007. That same data is also mirrored here
Import the data into R. It is tab delimited so you’ll want to use sep = "\t"
as an optional argument when calling read.csv()
. The \t
is how we indicate a
tab character to R (and most other programming languages).
Using ggplot
:
F_mass
column). Change
the x axis label to "Female Mass(g)"
.log10
scaled
version. Change the x axis label to "Female Mass(g)"
and the color of the
bars to blue (using the fill = "blue"
argument).geom_histogram()
layer that specifies a
new aesthetic. To make it possible to see both sets of bars you’ll need
to make them transparent with the optional argument alpha = 0.3
.facet_wrap()
to make one
subplot for each family.na.strings = c(“-999”, “-999.0”)
argument in read.csv()
to tell R what value(s) indicated nulls in a
dataset.