Victorian Alpine Plot Network (ATEX): Plot Microclimate Data, Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, 2014–2015 : Victorian Alpine Plot Network: Plot Micro Climate ATEX, 2014–2015

The objective of the Australian Tundra Experiment(ATEX) is to assess the likely response of vegetation and invertebrates to temperature increases attained through passive warming. The Australian Tundra Experiment (ATEX) follows the International Tundra Experiment (ITEX) protocol (Molau & Mølgaar...

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Main Authors: Hoffman, Ary, Williams, Dick, Wahren, Henrick, Camac, James, Morgan, John, Papst, Warwick
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Long Term Ecological Research Network 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5c3ecd43439bf
https://datacommons.anu.edu.au/DataCommons/item/anudc:5879
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description The objective of the Australian Tundra Experiment(ATEX) is to assess the likely response of vegetation and invertebrates to temperature increases attained through passive warming. The Australian Tundra Experiment (ATEX) follows the International Tundra Experiment (ITEX) protocol (Molau & Mølgaard 1996, Jarrad et al. 2009) which focuses on the growth and phenological responses of cold adapted vascular plant species to environmental change, specifically, to an increase in summer (growing season) temperatures. In addition to monitoring vegetation responses, the experimental warming chambers were used to monitor the response of invertebrates to warming. Warming is achieved using hexagonal fibreglass open-top warming chambers (OTCs). The OTCs were set up in December 2003 at 4 sites within a 2 × 4.5 km area of the Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, known as Rocky Knobs (36.90ºS, 147.27ºE). Two of the sites were established on vegetation that had been recently burnt by the 2003 bushfires. The sites are at approximately 1700 m above sea level and generally have snow cover of variable depth for 3 to 4 months each year (June-July to September-October). At each site, permanent plots of 1 m2 were selected to include as many of the common vascular grassland species as possible. Treatments were then allocated at random for a total of 40 control and 40 warmed plots. This dataset contains microclimate data for a subset of plots from 30-05-2014 to 2-05-2015. : Abstract: The objective of the Australian Tundra Experiment(ATEX) is to assess the likely response of vegetation and invertebrates to temperature increases attained through passive warming. The Australian Tundra Experiment (ATEX) follows the International Tundra Experiment (ITEX) protocol (Molau & Mølgaard 1996, Jarrad et al. 2009) which focuses on the growth and phenological responses of cold adapted vascular plant species to environmental change, specifically, to an increase in summer (growing season) temperatures. In addition to monitoring vegetation responses, the experimental warming chambers were used to monitor the response of invertebrates to warming. Warming is achieved using hexagonal fibreglass open-top warming chambers (OTCs). The OTCs were set up in December 2003 at 4 sites within a 2 × 4.5 km area of the Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, known as Rocky Knobs (36.90ºS, 147.27ºE). Two of the sites were established on vegetation that had been recently burnt by the 2003 bushfires. The sites are at approximately 1700 m above sea level and generally have snow cover of variable depth for 3 to 4 months each year (June-July to September-October). At each site, permanent plots of 1 m2 were selected to include as many of the common vascular grassland species as possible. Treatments were then allocated at random for a total of 40 control and 40 warmed plots. This dataset contains microclimate data for a subset of plots from 30-05-2014 to 2-05-2015. Sampling method: Each data logger used four sensors: ambient temperatures at 5 cm above the ground surface, soil surface temperatures, and soil temperatures 5 cm and 10 cm below ground. The soil surface sensor was positioned in an inter-tussock gap. Temperatures were recorded hourly. On 24/10/2008, due to problems with loggers, we replaced all Hobo H8 Outdoor/Industrial 4-channel loggers with a reduced set of HOBO U12 4-Channel External Data loggers (U12-008). Because analyses of the data showed that temperatures at the two unburnt sites were similar, as were temperatures at the two burnt sites, the new loggers were put in only at ITEX1U and ITEX3B. Study extent: At the beginning of the experiment in 2004, 24 Hobo H8 Outdoor/Industrial 4-channel data loggers were set up next to 24 plots across the 4 Australian ITEX sites. ITEX1U and ITEX2U (the two unburnt sites) each had 8 loggers: half randomly assigned to control (un-warmed) plots and half randomly assigned to OTC (warmed) plots. The two burnt sites (ITEX3B and ITEX4B) also had loggers, but because these sites had fewer plots and because of financial constraints only 4 loggers per site were installed (2 controls and 2 OTCs per site). Project funding: The experiment was initiated with funds from an Australia Research Council Linkage Grant for the period 2003-2006. A second Linkage Grant provided funds to continue the project from 2008 to 2012. Between 2012 and 2018 this project was part of, and funded through the Long Term Ecological Research Network (LTERN) a facility within the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN) and supported by the Australian Government through the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy.
format Dataset
author Hoffman, Ary
Williams, Dick
Wahren, Henrick
Camac, James
Morgan, John
Papst, Warwick
spellingShingle Hoffman, Ary
Williams, Dick
Wahren, Henrick
Camac, James
Morgan, John
Papst, Warwick
Victorian Alpine Plot Network (ATEX): Plot Microclimate Data, Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, 2014–2015 : Victorian Alpine Plot Network: Plot Micro Climate ATEX, 2014–2015
author_facet Hoffman, Ary
Williams, Dick
Wahren, Henrick
Camac, James
Morgan, John
Papst, Warwick
author_sort Hoffman, Ary
title Victorian Alpine Plot Network (ATEX): Plot Microclimate Data, Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, 2014–2015 : Victorian Alpine Plot Network: Plot Micro Climate ATEX, 2014–2015
title_short Victorian Alpine Plot Network (ATEX): Plot Microclimate Data, Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, 2014–2015 : Victorian Alpine Plot Network: Plot Micro Climate ATEX, 2014–2015
title_full Victorian Alpine Plot Network (ATEX): Plot Microclimate Data, Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, 2014–2015 : Victorian Alpine Plot Network: Plot Micro Climate ATEX, 2014–2015
title_fullStr Victorian Alpine Plot Network (ATEX): Plot Microclimate Data, Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, 2014–2015 : Victorian Alpine Plot Network: Plot Micro Climate ATEX, 2014–2015
title_full_unstemmed Victorian Alpine Plot Network (ATEX): Plot Microclimate Data, Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, 2014–2015 : Victorian Alpine Plot Network: Plot Micro Climate ATEX, 2014–2015
title_sort victorian alpine plot network (atex): plot microclimate data, bogong high plains, victoria, australia, 2014–2015 : victorian alpine plot network: plot micro climate atex, 2014–2015
publisher Long Term Ecological Research Network
publishDate 2018
url https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5c3ecd43439bf
https://datacommons.anu.edu.au/DataCommons/item/anudc:5879
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25911/5c3ecd43439bf
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spelling ftdatacite:10.25911/5c3ecd43439bf 2023-05-15T18:40:13+02:00 Victorian Alpine Plot Network (ATEX): Plot Microclimate Data, Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, 2014–2015 : Victorian Alpine Plot Network: Plot Micro Climate ATEX, 2014–2015 Hoffman, Ary Williams, Dick Wahren, Henrick Camac, James Morgan, John Papst, Warwick 2018 https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5c3ecd43439bf https://datacommons.anu.edu.au/DataCommons/item/anudc:5879 en eng Long Term Ecological Research Network dataset Dataset 2018 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.25911/5c3ecd43439bf 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The objective of the Australian Tundra Experiment(ATEX) is to assess the likely response of vegetation and invertebrates to temperature increases attained through passive warming. The Australian Tundra Experiment (ATEX) follows the International Tundra Experiment (ITEX) protocol (Molau & Mølgaard 1996, Jarrad et al. 2009) which focuses on the growth and phenological responses of cold adapted vascular plant species to environmental change, specifically, to an increase in summer (growing season) temperatures. In addition to monitoring vegetation responses, the experimental warming chambers were used to monitor the response of invertebrates to warming. Warming is achieved using hexagonal fibreglass open-top warming chambers (OTCs). The OTCs were set up in December 2003 at 4 sites within a 2 × 4.5 km area of the Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, known as Rocky Knobs (36.90ºS, 147.27ºE). Two of the sites were established on vegetation that had been recently burnt by the 2003 bushfires. The sites are at approximately 1700 m above sea level and generally have snow cover of variable depth for 3 to 4 months each year (June-July to September-October). At each site, permanent plots of 1 m2 were selected to include as many of the common vascular grassland species as possible. Treatments were then allocated at random for a total of 40 control and 40 warmed plots. This dataset contains microclimate data for a subset of plots from 30-05-2014 to 2-05-2015. : Abstract: The objective of the Australian Tundra Experiment(ATEX) is to assess the likely response of vegetation and invertebrates to temperature increases attained through passive warming. The Australian Tundra Experiment (ATEX) follows the International Tundra Experiment (ITEX) protocol (Molau & Mølgaard 1996, Jarrad et al. 2009) which focuses on the growth and phenological responses of cold adapted vascular plant species to environmental change, specifically, to an increase in summer (growing season) temperatures. In addition to monitoring vegetation responses, the experimental warming chambers were used to monitor the response of invertebrates to warming. Warming is achieved using hexagonal fibreglass open-top warming chambers (OTCs). The OTCs were set up in December 2003 at 4 sites within a 2 × 4.5 km area of the Bogong High Plains, Victoria, Australia, known as Rocky Knobs (36.90ºS, 147.27ºE). Two of the sites were established on vegetation that had been recently burnt by the 2003 bushfires. The sites are at approximately 1700 m above sea level and generally have snow cover of variable depth for 3 to 4 months each year (June-July to September-October). At each site, permanent plots of 1 m2 were selected to include as many of the common vascular grassland species as possible. Treatments were then allocated at random for a total of 40 control and 40 warmed plots. This dataset contains microclimate data for a subset of plots from 30-05-2014 to 2-05-2015. Sampling method: Each data logger used four sensors: ambient temperatures at 5 cm above the ground surface, soil surface temperatures, and soil temperatures 5 cm and 10 cm below ground. The soil surface sensor was positioned in an inter-tussock gap. Temperatures were recorded hourly. On 24/10/2008, due to problems with loggers, we replaced all Hobo H8 Outdoor/Industrial 4-channel loggers with a reduced set of HOBO U12 4-Channel External Data loggers (U12-008). Because analyses of the data showed that temperatures at the two unburnt sites were similar, as were temperatures at the two burnt sites, the new loggers were put in only at ITEX1U and ITEX3B. Study extent: At the beginning of the experiment in 2004, 24 Hobo H8 Outdoor/Industrial 4-channel data loggers were set up next to 24 plots across the 4 Australian ITEX sites. ITEX1U and ITEX2U (the two unburnt sites) each had 8 loggers: half randomly assigned to control (un-warmed) plots and half randomly assigned to OTC (warmed) plots. The two burnt sites (ITEX3B and ITEX4B) also had loggers, but because these sites had fewer plots and because of financial constraints only 4 loggers per site were installed (2 controls and 2 OTCs per site). Project funding: The experiment was initiated with funds from an Australia Research Council Linkage Grant for the period 2003-2006. A second Linkage Grant provided funds to continue the project from 2008 to 2012. Between 2012 and 2018 this project was part of, and funded through the Long Term Ecological Research Network (LTERN) a facility within the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN) and supported by the Australian Government through the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy. Dataset Tundra DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)