Victorian Tall Eucalypt Forest Plot Network (Victorian Central Highlands Monitoring Project): Tree Fern Growth Study, Victoria, Australia, 2014

We measured 5 years of growth of 335 Cyathea australis and Dicksonia antarctica after a large wildfire in 2009 in south-eastern Australia. The ferns were in 4 separate geographic locations (Wallaby Creek, Marysville, Toolangi and O’Shannassy) and sites within each area had different environmental va...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: David Lindenmayer, David Blair
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: TERN Australia 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern4.42.19/html
id dataone:www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern4.42.19/html
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern4.42.19/html 2024-06-03T18:46:23+00:00 Victorian Tall Eucalypt Forest Plot Network (Victorian Central Highlands Monitoring Project): Tree Fern Growth Study, Victoria, Australia, 2014 David Lindenmayer David Blair Victorian Central Highlands, Wallaby Creek, Toolangi, Marysville, O’Shannassy water catchment ENVELOPE(145.5,146.125,-37.875,-37.875) BEGINDATE: 2014-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2014-01-01T00:00:00Z 2016-08-19T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern4.42.19/html unknown TERN Australia Earth science. Biosphere. Vegetation. Plant characteristics. Vegetation structure Individual plants Fire 0602 Ecology 0607 Plant Biology Tree ferns, Dicksonia antarctica, Cyathea australis, growth rates Cyathea australis Dicksonia antarctica Dataset 2016 dataone:urn:node:TERN 2024-06-03T18:09:01Z We measured 5 years of growth of 335 Cyathea australis and Dicksonia antarctica after a large wildfire in 2009 in south-eastern Australia. The ferns were in 4 separate geographic locations (Wallaby Creek, Marysville, Toolangi and O’Shannassy) and sites within each area had different environmental variables, which were measured (slope, aspect, elevation). Tree ferns had overall height measured using a tape measure and the new post-fire growth measured using calipers. The tree ferns were measured to determine average growth rates of the two species and which of the environmental variables were important for fern growth. We found growth rates of these two species were largely unaffected by static environmental variables or geographic location. However, growth rates were significantly related to initial height at the time of the fire; a finding consistent in both species and all geographic locations. Dataset Antarc* Antarctica TERN Australia (via DataONE) ENVELOPE(145.5,146.125,-37.875,-37.875)
institution Open Polar
collection TERN Australia (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:TERN
language unknown
topic Earth science. Biosphere. Vegetation. Plant characteristics.
Vegetation structure
Individual plants
Fire
0602 Ecology
0607 Plant Biology
Tree ferns, Dicksonia antarctica, Cyathea australis, growth rates
Cyathea australis
Dicksonia antarctica
spellingShingle Earth science. Biosphere. Vegetation. Plant characteristics.
Vegetation structure
Individual plants
Fire
0602 Ecology
0607 Plant Biology
Tree ferns, Dicksonia antarctica, Cyathea australis, growth rates
Cyathea australis
Dicksonia antarctica
David Lindenmayer
David Blair
Victorian Tall Eucalypt Forest Plot Network (Victorian Central Highlands Monitoring Project): Tree Fern Growth Study, Victoria, Australia, 2014
topic_facet Earth science. Biosphere. Vegetation. Plant characteristics.
Vegetation structure
Individual plants
Fire
0602 Ecology
0607 Plant Biology
Tree ferns, Dicksonia antarctica, Cyathea australis, growth rates
Cyathea australis
Dicksonia antarctica
description We measured 5 years of growth of 335 Cyathea australis and Dicksonia antarctica after a large wildfire in 2009 in south-eastern Australia. The ferns were in 4 separate geographic locations (Wallaby Creek, Marysville, Toolangi and O’Shannassy) and sites within each area had different environmental variables, which were measured (slope, aspect, elevation). Tree ferns had overall height measured using a tape measure and the new post-fire growth measured using calipers. The tree ferns were measured to determine average growth rates of the two species and which of the environmental variables were important for fern growth. We found growth rates of these two species were largely unaffected by static environmental variables or geographic location. However, growth rates were significantly related to initial height at the time of the fire; a finding consistent in both species and all geographic locations.
format Dataset
author David Lindenmayer
David Blair
author_facet David Lindenmayer
David Blair
author_sort David Lindenmayer
title Victorian Tall Eucalypt Forest Plot Network (Victorian Central Highlands Monitoring Project): Tree Fern Growth Study, Victoria, Australia, 2014
title_short Victorian Tall Eucalypt Forest Plot Network (Victorian Central Highlands Monitoring Project): Tree Fern Growth Study, Victoria, Australia, 2014
title_full Victorian Tall Eucalypt Forest Plot Network (Victorian Central Highlands Monitoring Project): Tree Fern Growth Study, Victoria, Australia, 2014
title_fullStr Victorian Tall Eucalypt Forest Plot Network (Victorian Central Highlands Monitoring Project): Tree Fern Growth Study, Victoria, Australia, 2014
title_full_unstemmed Victorian Tall Eucalypt Forest Plot Network (Victorian Central Highlands Monitoring Project): Tree Fern Growth Study, Victoria, Australia, 2014
title_sort victorian tall eucalypt forest plot network (victorian central highlands monitoring project): tree fern growth study, victoria, australia, 2014
publisher TERN Australia
publishDate 2016
url https://search.dataone.org/view/www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern4.42.19/html
op_coverage Victorian Central Highlands, Wallaby Creek, Toolangi, Marysville, O’Shannassy water catchment
ENVELOPE(145.5,146.125,-37.875,-37.875)
BEGINDATE: 2014-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2014-01-01T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(145.5,146.125,-37.875,-37.875)
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
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