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Data from: Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory

dataset
posted on 2024-02-09, 18:09 authored by Joshua P. Averett, Michael J. Wisdom, Bridgett J. Naylor, Mary M. Rowland, Bryan A. Endress

The data and analyses presented here include: (1) planting density, survival and growth (two years post restoration) of riparian plantings along an ~11 km steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and Chinook (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) salmon stream reach of Meadow Creek, Starkey Experimental Forest and Range of the USDA Forest Service in northeastern Oregon, USA (45˚12′ N, 118˚ 3′ W) as a function of elk (Cervus elaphus) and mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) herbivory treatment (protected/not protected from wild ungulate herbivory), habitat type, and planting species; and (2) abundance and height distributions of naturally occurring deciduous woody species along the restored stream reach two years post restoration. Survival and growth analyses are provided as output from multiple logistic and mixed effect regression models respectively. These data and analyses support the research article "Wild ungulate herbivory suppresses deciduous woody plant establishment following salmonid stream restoration" Averett et al. (2017) For. Ecol. Manage., 391:135-144.


Resources in this dataset:

  • Resource Title: Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory.

    File Name: Web Page, url: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340917303049

    Data in Brief article describing: (1) sampling densities of plantings by species along the restored reach (Fig. 1); (2) survival analyses using multiple logistic and mixed effects logistic regression (Tables 1 and 2); (3) growth analyses using mixed effects regression (Tables 3 and 4); (4) abundance (presence/absence) of naturally occurring deciduous woody species along the restored stream reach two years following restoration (Fig. 2); and (5) height distributions of naturally occurring deciduous woody species for highly and less preferred (by elk and deer) species as well as percentage of individuals within those two categories subjected to intensive browsing pressure (Fig. 3). Corresponding datasets are provided within Supplementary file: MeadowCreekPlantingData.xlsx which provides the raw dataset used for: (1) survival analysis (worksheet, ‘Survival’); (2) growth analysis (worksheet, ‘Growth’); (3) abundance and height distributions of naturally occurring deciduous woody vegetation (worksheet, ‘Nat_Occ_Species’); and (4) counts of plantings by species for each riparian transect (worksheet, ‘Planting_Density’).

Funding

USDA-FS: 14-JV-11261962-035

History

Data contact name

Averett, Joshua P.

Data contact email

averettj@oregonstate.edu

Publisher

Data in Brief

Intended use

These data present survival and growth of woody riparian restoration plantings across two levels of wild ungulate herbivory and can be compared to other restoration planting studies. The data provide post-restoration abundance and heights of naturally occurring deciduous woody species that can be compared to riparian vegetation recovery in other studies. Future repeated measurements can be compared to this data to reveal long-term relationships between wild ungulate herbivory and woody riparian vegetation development. These data allow researchers to extend the analyses.

Theme

  • Not specified

Geographic Coverage

{"type":"FeatureCollection","features":[{"geometry":{"type":"Point","coordinates":[-118.05,45.2]},"type":"Feature","properties":{}}]}

Geographic location - description

Starkey Experimental Forest and Range, northeastern Oregon, United States

ISO Topic Category

  • biota
  • environment
  • inlandWaters

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

Cervus elaphus; Odocoileus hemionus; Oncorhynchus mykiss; Oncorhynchus tshawytscha; Populus balsamifera; cattle; collars; deer; elks; global positioning systems; growing season; herbivores; meadows; planting; salmon; shrubs; streams; survival rate; telemetry; woody plants; Oregon; USDA Forest Service; plant density; United States; ungulates; habitats; regression analysis; Salmonidae; riparian buffers; deciduous forests; ecological restoration

Primary article PubAg Handle

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public

Preferred dataset citation

Averett, J. P., Wisdom, M. J., Naylor, B. J., Rowland, M. M., & Endress, B. A. (2017). Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory. Data in Brief 14: 168-174. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2017.07.002

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