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Jervis Bay Booderee National Park Plot Network: Temporal Trends in Mammal Responses to Fire Reveals the Complex Effects of Fire-regime Attributes, 2003-2013 

Ver: 20
Status of Data: Data not provided
Update Frequency: Data not provided
Security Classification: unclassified
Record Last Modified: 2015-06-03
Viewed 858 times
Accessed 5 times
Dataset Created: Date not provided
Dataset Published: 2015-06-03
Data can be accessed from the following links:
HTTPPoint-of-truth metadata URLHTTPhtml
How to cite this collection:
Lindenmayer, D. (2015). Jervis Bay Booderee National Park Plot Network: Temporal Trends in Mammal Responses to Fire Reveals the Complex Effects of Fire-regime Attributes, 2003-2013. Version 20. Long Term Ecological Research Network. Dataset. https://portal.tern.org.au/metadata/c31aecc4-acad-502d-8aee-eb03cbd61fac 
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. 
Credit
Data not provided. 
Purpose
Data not provided. 
Lineage
Data not provided. 
Method DocumentationData not provided.
Procedure StepsData not provided.
Booderee National Park, Jervis Bay Territory, South-eastern Australia.
Temporal Coverage
From 2003-01-01 to 2013-01-01 
Spatial Resolution

Data not provided.

Vertical Extent

Data not provided.

ANZSRC - FOR
Ecology
GCMD Sciences
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION - MAMMALS
User Defined
Fire regime variables
Fire-time interaction
Hurdle models
Invisible mosaic
Mammals
South-eastern Australia
Temporal responses to fire
Author
Lindenmayer, David
Publisher
Australian National University
Stakeholder
Department of Defence, Australian Government
Parks Australia
Wreck Bay Aboriginal Community Council
Berry, Laurence
Gill, Malcolm
Blanchard, Wade
Michael, Damian
Barton, Philip
Okada, Sachiko
Crane, Mason
Banks, Sam
Florance, Daniel
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Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Co-authorship with the data provider (Professor David Lindenmayer) of any publication of research utilising this data is an expected outcome. The data provider requests consultation, including a summary of the proposed research and intended use before publication of research utilising this data is possible. 

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