Rocky intertidal site information, Western Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, U.S., Summer 2018

Rocky intertidal ecology has had a long history of attempting to identify ecosystem patterns, associations, and the underlying mechanisms of each. Biotic (competition, predation, and trophic cascades) and abiotic (slope, rugosity, aspect, wave exposure, etc.) factors have been shown to influence roc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ashley Bolwerk
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:6ca47f68-4e01-4197-a0a1-f5ddc07c00c8
id dataone:urn:uuid:6ca47f68-4e01-4197-a0a1-f5ddc07c00c8
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:urn:uuid:6ca47f68-4e01-4197-a0a1-f5ddc07c00c8 2023-12-03T20:44:02+01:00 Rocky intertidal site information, Western Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, U.S., Summer 2018 Ashley Bolwerk Western Prince of Wales Island and surrounding islands, Alaska. U.S. ENVELOPE(-134.08704,-132.59917,56.341194,55.02678) BEGINDATE: 2018-05-17T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2018-08-13T00:00:00Z 2020-05-26T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:6ca47f68-4e01-4197-a0a1-f5ddc07c00c8 unknown Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity rocky intertidal Southeast Alaska Dataset 2020 dataone:urn:node:KNB 2023-12-03T20:15:54Z Rocky intertidal ecology has had a long history of attempting to identify ecosystem patterns, associations, and the underlying mechanisms of each. Biotic (competition, predation, and trophic cascades) and abiotic (slope, rugosity, aspect, wave exposure, etc.) factors have been shown to influence rocky intertidal ecosystems, but these characteristics are highly variable on the beaches of Prince of Wales and surrounding islands (POW). The shoreline is highly complex, resulting in drastic shifts in environmental parameters. Sea otters, a species shown to restructure kelp ecosystems through predation pressure, were reintroduced to POW fifty years ago and their subsequent expansion created a gradient of sea otter occupation time among rocky intertidal sites. Due to the complexity of environmental and biological forces occurring at rocky intertidal beaches on POW, this study was conducted to measure the minimum and maximum elevations of major biobands as a metric of rocky intertidal community structure. The elevations of major biobands can be used to assess the interactions and relative importance of biotic and abiotic forces on the rocky intertidal ecosystems of POW. Bioband elevations can be found in the "Rocky intertidal bioband elevations, Western Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, U.S., Summer 2018" data package. Dataset Prince of Wales Island Alaska Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity (via DataONE) Prince of Wales Island ENVELOPE(-99.001,-99.001,72.668,72.668) The Beaches ENVELOPE(-56.832,-56.832,49.583,49.583) ENVELOPE(-134.08704,-132.59917,56.341194,55.02678)
institution Open Polar
collection Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:KNB
language unknown
topic rocky intertidal
Southeast Alaska
spellingShingle rocky intertidal
Southeast Alaska
Ashley Bolwerk
Rocky intertidal site information, Western Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, U.S., Summer 2018
topic_facet rocky intertidal
Southeast Alaska
description Rocky intertidal ecology has had a long history of attempting to identify ecosystem patterns, associations, and the underlying mechanisms of each. Biotic (competition, predation, and trophic cascades) and abiotic (slope, rugosity, aspect, wave exposure, etc.) factors have been shown to influence rocky intertidal ecosystems, but these characteristics are highly variable on the beaches of Prince of Wales and surrounding islands (POW). The shoreline is highly complex, resulting in drastic shifts in environmental parameters. Sea otters, a species shown to restructure kelp ecosystems through predation pressure, were reintroduced to POW fifty years ago and their subsequent expansion created a gradient of sea otter occupation time among rocky intertidal sites. Due to the complexity of environmental and biological forces occurring at rocky intertidal beaches on POW, this study was conducted to measure the minimum and maximum elevations of major biobands as a metric of rocky intertidal community structure. The elevations of major biobands can be used to assess the interactions and relative importance of biotic and abiotic forces on the rocky intertidal ecosystems of POW. Bioband elevations can be found in the "Rocky intertidal bioband elevations, Western Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, U.S., Summer 2018" data package.
format Dataset
author Ashley Bolwerk
author_facet Ashley Bolwerk
author_sort Ashley Bolwerk
title Rocky intertidal site information, Western Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, U.S., Summer 2018
title_short Rocky intertidal site information, Western Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, U.S., Summer 2018
title_full Rocky intertidal site information, Western Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, U.S., Summer 2018
title_fullStr Rocky intertidal site information, Western Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, U.S., Summer 2018
title_full_unstemmed Rocky intertidal site information, Western Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, U.S., Summer 2018
title_sort rocky intertidal site information, western prince of wales island, alaska, u.s., summer 2018
publisher Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity
publishDate 2020
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:6ca47f68-4e01-4197-a0a1-f5ddc07c00c8
op_coverage Western Prince of Wales Island and surrounding islands, Alaska. U.S.
ENVELOPE(-134.08704,-132.59917,56.341194,55.02678)
BEGINDATE: 2018-05-17T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2018-08-13T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-99.001,-99.001,72.668,72.668)
ENVELOPE(-56.832,-56.832,49.583,49.583)
ENVELOPE(-134.08704,-132.59917,56.341194,55.02678)
geographic Prince of Wales Island
The Beaches
geographic_facet Prince of Wales Island
The Beaches
genre Prince of Wales Island
Alaska
genre_facet Prince of Wales Island
Alaska
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