Replication Data for: Small rodent population cycles and plants – after 70 years, where do we go?

Small rodent population cycles characterise northern ecosystems, and the cause of these cycles has been a long-lasting central topic in ecology. In the related publication, we present a systematic literature review on whether plants can cause rodent population cycles, dividing this idea into four di...

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Main Authors: Soininen, Eeva, M., Neby, Magne
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: DataverseNO 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18710/ONEYAM
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spelling ftdataverseno:doi:10.18710/ONEYAM 2023-11-12T04:27:36+01:00 Replication Data for: Small rodent population cycles and plants – after 70 years, where do we go? Soininen, Eeva, M. Neby, Magne Neby, Magne 2023-08-30 https://doi.org/10.18710/ONEYAM unknown DataverseNO https://doi.org/10.18710/ONEYAM Earth and Environmental Sciences plant–herbivore interaction arvicoline population dynamics vole lemming herbivore bottom-up top-down rodent population cycle database Survey data 2023 ftdataverseno https://doi.org/10.18710/ONEYAM 2023-10-25T22:52:01Z Small rodent population cycles characterise northern ecosystems, and the cause of these cycles has been a long-lasting central topic in ecology. In the related publication, we present a systematic literature review on whether plants can cause rodent population cycles, dividing this idea into four different hypotheses with different pathways of plant impacts and related assumptions. We identified 231 studies from 150 publications covering studies from the temperate biome to the tundra, across various study systems, and different topics. The data on included and excluded publications are deposited here. Dataset Tundra DataverseNO
institution Open Polar
collection DataverseNO
op_collection_id ftdataverseno
language unknown
topic Earth and Environmental Sciences
plant–herbivore interaction
arvicoline
population dynamics
vole
lemming
herbivore
bottom-up
top-down
rodent
population cycle
database
spellingShingle Earth and Environmental Sciences
plant–herbivore interaction
arvicoline
population dynamics
vole
lemming
herbivore
bottom-up
top-down
rodent
population cycle
database
Soininen, Eeva, M.
Neby, Magne
Replication Data for: Small rodent population cycles and plants – after 70 years, where do we go?
topic_facet Earth and Environmental Sciences
plant–herbivore interaction
arvicoline
population dynamics
vole
lemming
herbivore
bottom-up
top-down
rodent
population cycle
database
description Small rodent population cycles characterise northern ecosystems, and the cause of these cycles has been a long-lasting central topic in ecology. In the related publication, we present a systematic literature review on whether plants can cause rodent population cycles, dividing this idea into four different hypotheses with different pathways of plant impacts and related assumptions. We identified 231 studies from 150 publications covering studies from the temperate biome to the tundra, across various study systems, and different topics. The data on included and excluded publications are deposited here.
author2 Neby, Magne
format Dataset
author Soininen, Eeva, M.
Neby, Magne
author_facet Soininen, Eeva, M.
Neby, Magne
author_sort Soininen, Eeva, M.
title Replication Data for: Small rodent population cycles and plants – after 70 years, where do we go?
title_short Replication Data for: Small rodent population cycles and plants – after 70 years, where do we go?
title_full Replication Data for: Small rodent population cycles and plants – after 70 years, where do we go?
title_fullStr Replication Data for: Small rodent population cycles and plants – after 70 years, where do we go?
title_full_unstemmed Replication Data for: Small rodent population cycles and plants – after 70 years, where do we go?
title_sort replication data for: small rodent population cycles and plants – after 70 years, where do we go?
publisher DataverseNO
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.18710/ONEYAM
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
op_relation https://doi.org/10.18710/ONEYAM
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18710/ONEYAM
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