Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory
These data and analyses support the research article “Wild ungulate herbivory suppresses deciduous woody plant establishment following salmonid stream restoration” Averett et al. (2017) [1]. The data and analyses presented here include: (1) planting density, survival and growth (two years post resto...
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doaj-b0b3735ba8634483bd336dec16c340362020-11-25T01:25:43ZengElsevierData in Brief2352-34092017-10-0114C16817410.1016/j.dib.2017.07.002Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivoryJoshua P. Averett0Michael J. Wisdom1Bridgett J. Naylor2Mary M. Rowland3Bryan A. Endress4Eastern Oregon Agriculture and Natural Resource Program, Oregon State University, Badgley Hall 205, One University Blvd., La Grande, OR 97850, USAUSDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 1401 Gekeler Ln., La Grande, OR 97850, USAUSDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 1401 Gekeler Ln., La Grande, OR 97850, USAUSDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 1401 Gekeler Ln., La Grande, OR 97850, USAEastern Oregon Agriculture and Natural Resource Program, Oregon State University, Badgley Hall 205, One University Blvd., La Grande, OR 97850, USAThese data and analyses support the research article “Wild ungulate herbivory suppresses deciduous woody plant establishment following salmonid stream restoration” Averett et al. (2017) [1]. The data and analyses presented here include: (1) planting density, survival and growth (two years post restoration) of riparian plantings along an ~11 km stream reach in northeastern Oregon as a function of 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.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340917303049 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Joshua P. Averett Michael J. Wisdom Bridgett J. Naylor Mary M. Rowland Bryan A. Endress |
spellingShingle |
Joshua P. Averett Michael J. Wisdom Bridgett J. Naylor Mary M. Rowland Bryan A. Endress Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory Data in Brief |
author_facet |
Joshua P. Averett Michael J. Wisdom Bridgett J. Naylor Mary M. Rowland Bryan A. Endress |
author_sort |
Joshua P. Averett |
title |
Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory |
title_short |
Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory |
title_full |
Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory |
title_fullStr |
Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory |
title_full_unstemmed |
Data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory |
title_sort |
data and analyses of woody restoration planting survival and growth as a function of wild ungulate herbivory |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Data in Brief |
issn |
2352-3409 |
publishDate |
2017-10-01 |
description |
These data and analyses support the research article “Wild ungulate herbivory suppresses deciduous woody plant establishment following salmonid stream restoration” Averett et al. (2017) [1]. The data and analyses presented here include: (1) planting density, survival and growth (two years post restoration) of riparian plantings along an ~11 km stream reach in northeastern Oregon as a function of 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. |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340917303049 |
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