Temporal Trends in Mammal-responses to Fire Reveals the Complex Effects of Fire-regime Attributes, 2015

This terrestrial mammal trapping and spotlighting data package comprises time series data for 11 mammal species at 97 long-term sites in south-eastern Australia. Observations were made between 2003 and 2013. The objectives of this research were to identify which fire regime attributes affect tempora...

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Main Author: David Lindenmayer
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: TERN Australia 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern2.1044.16/html
id dataone:www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern2.1044.16/html
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern2.1044.16/html 2023-12-03T20:44:02+01:00 Temporal Trends in Mammal-responses to Fire Reveals the Complex Effects of Fire-regime Attributes, 2015 David Lindenmayer Booderee National Park, Jervis Bay Territory, South-eastern Australia. ENVELOPE(150.52538,150.7575,-35.11862,-35.1837) BEGINDATE: 2003-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2013-01-01T00:00:00Z 2015-06-03T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern2.1044.16/html unknown TERN Australia Mammals Fire regime variables Temporal responses to fire Fire-time interaction Invisible mosaic Hurdle models South-eastern Australia 0602 0608 Biological Classification > Animals/Vertebrates > Mammals Antechinus stuartii Cercartetus nanus Macropus rufogriseus Perameles nasuta Pseudomys gracilicaudatus Rattus fuscipes Rattus lutreolus Rattus rattus Tachyglossus aculeatus Trichosurus vulpecula Wallabia bicolor Dataset 2015 dataone:urn:node:TERN 2023-12-03T20:08:12Z This terrestrial mammal trapping and spotlighting data package comprises time series data for 11 mammal species at 97 long-term sites in south-eastern Australia. Observations were made between 2003 and 2013. The objectives of this research were to identify which fire regime attributes affect temporal change in the presence and abundance of Australian native mammals. In the associated research publication, the researchers explored how temporal aspects of fire regimes influenced both the presence and the conditional abundance of species. The key fire regime components examined as part of the research were: (i) severity of a major fire in 2003, (ii) the interval between the last major fire (2003) and the fire prior to that, and (iii) number of past fires. This long-term dataset has enabled quantification of the interactions between survey year and each fire regime variable, an ecological relationship notably missing from temporally-restricted studies. In summary, multiple aspects of fire regimes influenced temporal variation in the presence and abundance of mammals. The best models indicated that 6 of the 11 species responded to two or more fire regime variables, with two species influenced by all three fire regime attributes. Almost all species responded to time since fire, either as an interaction with survey year or as a main effect. Fire severity or its interaction with survey year was important for most terrestrial rodents. The number of fires at a site was significant for species of terrestrial rodents and several other species. Key findings contain evidence of the effects on native mammals of heterogeneity in fire regimes. Refer to the relevant research paper for more detail. The Jervis Bay Plot Network study forms part of the collection of data packages by this plot network. A synopsis of related data packages which have been collected as part of the Jervis Bay Plot Network’s full program is provided at http://www.ltern.org.au/index.php/ltern-plot-networks/jervis-bay-booderee-national-park. Dataset Rattus rattus TERN Australia (via DataONE) ENVELOPE(150.52538,150.7575,-35.11862,-35.1837)
institution Open Polar
collection TERN Australia (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:TERN
language unknown
topic Mammals
Fire regime variables
Temporal responses to fire
Fire-time interaction
Invisible mosaic
Hurdle models
South-eastern Australia
0602
0608
Biological Classification > Animals/Vertebrates > Mammals
Antechinus stuartii
Cercartetus nanus
Macropus rufogriseus
Perameles nasuta
Pseudomys gracilicaudatus
Rattus fuscipes
Rattus lutreolus
Rattus rattus
Tachyglossus aculeatus
Trichosurus vulpecula
Wallabia bicolor
spellingShingle Mammals
Fire regime variables
Temporal responses to fire
Fire-time interaction
Invisible mosaic
Hurdle models
South-eastern Australia
0602
0608
Biological Classification > Animals/Vertebrates > Mammals
Antechinus stuartii
Cercartetus nanus
Macropus rufogriseus
Perameles nasuta
Pseudomys gracilicaudatus
Rattus fuscipes
Rattus lutreolus
Rattus rattus
Tachyglossus aculeatus
Trichosurus vulpecula
Wallabia bicolor
David Lindenmayer
Temporal Trends in Mammal-responses to Fire Reveals the Complex Effects of Fire-regime Attributes, 2015
topic_facet Mammals
Fire regime variables
Temporal responses to fire
Fire-time interaction
Invisible mosaic
Hurdle models
South-eastern Australia
0602
0608
Biological Classification > Animals/Vertebrates > Mammals
Antechinus stuartii
Cercartetus nanus
Macropus rufogriseus
Perameles nasuta
Pseudomys gracilicaudatus
Rattus fuscipes
Rattus lutreolus
Rattus rattus
Tachyglossus aculeatus
Trichosurus vulpecula
Wallabia bicolor
description This terrestrial mammal trapping and spotlighting data package comprises time series data for 11 mammal species at 97 long-term sites in south-eastern Australia. Observations were made between 2003 and 2013. The objectives of this research were to identify which fire regime attributes affect temporal change in the presence and abundance of Australian native mammals. In the associated research publication, the researchers explored how temporal aspects of fire regimes influenced both the presence and the conditional abundance of species. The key fire regime components examined as part of the research were: (i) severity of a major fire in 2003, (ii) the interval between the last major fire (2003) and the fire prior to that, and (iii) number of past fires. This long-term dataset has enabled quantification of the interactions between survey year and each fire regime variable, an ecological relationship notably missing from temporally-restricted studies. In summary, multiple aspects of fire regimes influenced temporal variation in the presence and abundance of mammals. The best models indicated that 6 of the 11 species responded to two or more fire regime variables, with two species influenced by all three fire regime attributes. Almost all species responded to time since fire, either as an interaction with survey year or as a main effect. Fire severity or its interaction with survey year was important for most terrestrial rodents. The number of fires at a site was significant for species of terrestrial rodents and several other species. Key findings contain evidence of the effects on native mammals of heterogeneity in fire regimes. Refer to the relevant research paper for more detail. The Jervis Bay Plot Network study forms part of the collection of data packages by this plot network. A synopsis of related data packages which have been collected as part of the Jervis Bay Plot Network’s full program is provided at http://www.ltern.org.au/index.php/ltern-plot-networks/jervis-bay-booderee-national-park.
format Dataset
author David Lindenmayer
author_facet David Lindenmayer
author_sort David Lindenmayer
title Temporal Trends in Mammal-responses to Fire Reveals the Complex Effects of Fire-regime Attributes, 2015
title_short Temporal Trends in Mammal-responses to Fire Reveals the Complex Effects of Fire-regime Attributes, 2015
title_full Temporal Trends in Mammal-responses to Fire Reveals the Complex Effects of Fire-regime Attributes, 2015
title_fullStr Temporal Trends in Mammal-responses to Fire Reveals the Complex Effects of Fire-regime Attributes, 2015
title_full_unstemmed Temporal Trends in Mammal-responses to Fire Reveals the Complex Effects of Fire-regime Attributes, 2015
title_sort temporal trends in mammal-responses to fire reveals the complex effects of fire-regime attributes, 2015
publisher TERN Australia
publishDate 2015
url https://search.dataone.org/view/www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern2.1044.16/html
op_coverage Booderee National Park, Jervis Bay Territory, South-eastern Australia.
ENVELOPE(150.52538,150.7575,-35.11862,-35.1837)
BEGINDATE: 2003-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2013-01-01T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(150.52538,150.7575,-35.11862,-35.1837)
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
_version_ 1784300539312340992