Recruitment of black and white spruce in the Brooks Range, Alaska

Although black spruce is the dominant treeline species in the eastern boreal forest, its distribution stops several kilometers short of treeline in the Brooks Range in Alaska, and white spruce is the dominant treeline species. The explanation for this distribution is not known, but two hypotheses ar...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: ChristopherFastie
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Bonanza Creek LTERBoreal Ecology Cooperative Research Unit University of Alaska FairbanksP.O. Box 756780 FairbanksAK99775USA907-474-6364907-474-6251 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.12235
http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-bnz.86.8/xml
id ftdryad:oai:v1.datadryad.org:10255/dryad.12235
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdryad:oai:v1.datadryad.org:10255/dryad.12235 2023-05-15T15:46:57+02:00 Recruitment of black and white spruce in the Brooks Range, Alaska ChristopherFastie Site DH200 is part of a series of sites established near the northern range limit of black spruce. This is one of 3 sites located along a 3 mile stretch of the Dalton Hwy. There are 3 permanently marked study plots at each site in which all trees and seedlings are tagged. -149.8151333 W -149.8151333 E 67.57093333 N 67.57093333 S 2003-06-01 to 2003-09-30 2005-11-07 http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.12235 http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-bnz.86.8/xml unknown Bonanza Creek LTERBoreal Ecology Cooperative Research Unit University of Alaska FairbanksP.O. Box 756780 FairbanksAK99775USA907-474-6364907-474-6251 http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-bnz.86.8/xml knb-lter-bnz.86.8 http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.12235 Access to Data While metadata will be freely available to those requesting it, the data manager will assure that any restrictions on access to data sets in the database will be enforced. Data will not be released without proper permission first being obtained from the investigator who generated the data. Use of data Researchers should receive adequate acknowledgment for the use of their data by others and should be provided with copies of publications using their data. Users of data from the data base must be aware that data is not to be sold or redistributed.Citing Bonanza Creek LTER DatasetsIt is considered a matter of professional ethics to acknowledge the work of other scientists. Thus, the Data User will properly cite the Data Set in any publications or in the metadata of any derived data products that were produced using the Data Set. Picea mariana black spruce Brooks Range distribution recruitment fires dataset 2005 ftdryad 2020-01-01T14:27:03Z Although black spruce is the dominant treeline species in the eastern boreal forest, its distribution stops several kilometers short of treeline in the Brooks Range in Alaska, and white spruce is the dominant treeline species. The explanation for this distribution is not known, but two hypotheses are plausible. First, black spruce may be less tolerant of climatic conditions near treeline than white spruce. Second, black spruce may be unable to regenerate successfully near treeline due to long intervals between fires. We are establishing permanently marked study plots along a transect from the Yukon River basin, where black spruce is the dominant species, to the foothills of the Brooks Range, where it reaches its distributional limit. We are reconstructing recruitment history of both black and white spruce at our study sites, and are reconstructing recent fire history from analysis of fire scars and stand age structures. These data are being used to parameterize matrix population models, with which we are describing patterns of population stability. Dataset Brooks Range Yukon river Alaska Yukon Dryad Digital Repository (Duke University) Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection Dryad Digital Repository (Duke University)
op_collection_id ftdryad
language unknown
topic Picea mariana
black spruce
Brooks Range
distribution
recruitment
fires
spellingShingle Picea mariana
black spruce
Brooks Range
distribution
recruitment
fires
Recruitment of black and white spruce in the Brooks Range, Alaska
topic_facet Picea mariana
black spruce
Brooks Range
distribution
recruitment
fires
description Although black spruce is the dominant treeline species in the eastern boreal forest, its distribution stops several kilometers short of treeline in the Brooks Range in Alaska, and white spruce is the dominant treeline species. The explanation for this distribution is not known, but two hypotheses are plausible. First, black spruce may be less tolerant of climatic conditions near treeline than white spruce. Second, black spruce may be unable to regenerate successfully near treeline due to long intervals between fires. We are establishing permanently marked study plots along a transect from the Yukon River basin, where black spruce is the dominant species, to the foothills of the Brooks Range, where it reaches its distributional limit. We are reconstructing recruitment history of both black and white spruce at our study sites, and are reconstructing recent fire history from analysis of fire scars and stand age structures. These data are being used to parameterize matrix population models, with which we are describing patterns of population stability.
author2 ChristopherFastie
format Dataset
title Recruitment of black and white spruce in the Brooks Range, Alaska
title_short Recruitment of black and white spruce in the Brooks Range, Alaska
title_full Recruitment of black and white spruce in the Brooks Range, Alaska
title_fullStr Recruitment of black and white spruce in the Brooks Range, Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Recruitment of black and white spruce in the Brooks Range, Alaska
title_sort recruitment of black and white spruce in the brooks range, alaska
publisher Bonanza Creek LTERBoreal Ecology Cooperative Research Unit University of Alaska FairbanksP.O. Box 756780 FairbanksAK99775USA907-474-6364907-474-6251
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.12235
http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-bnz.86.8/xml
op_coverage Site DH200 is part of a series of sites established near the northern range limit of black spruce. This is one of 3 sites located along a 3 mile stretch of the Dalton Hwy. There are 3 permanently marked study plots at each site in which all trees and seedlings are tagged.
-149.8151333 W -149.8151333 E 67.57093333 N 67.57093333 S
2003-06-01 to 2003-09-30
geographic Yukon
geographic_facet Yukon
genre Brooks Range
Yukon river
Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Brooks Range
Yukon river
Alaska
Yukon
op_relation http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-bnz.86.8/xml
knb-lter-bnz.86.8
http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.12235
op_rights Access to Data While metadata will be freely available to those requesting it, the data manager will assure that any restrictions on access to data sets in the database will be enforced. Data will not be released without proper permission first being obtained from the investigator who generated the data. Use of data Researchers should receive adequate acknowledgment for the use of their data by others and should be provided with copies of publications using their data. Users of data from the data base must be aware that data is not to be sold or redistributed.Citing Bonanza Creek LTER DatasetsIt is considered a matter of professional ethics to acknowledge the work of other scientists. Thus, the Data User will properly cite the Data Set in any publications or in the metadata of any derived data products that were produced using the Data Set.
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