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Two centuries of masting data for European beech and Norway spruce across the European continent

Authors :
Marco Conedera
Peter Thomas
Burkhard Beudert
Davide Ascoli
Marjana Westergren
Renzo Motta
Giorgio Vacchiano
Luc Croisé
Silvio Schueler
Rolf Övergaard
Igor Drobyshev
Anton Burkart
Christian Zang
Mara Cirolli
Pietro Piussi
Ciprian Palaghianu
Janet Maringer
Władysław Kantorowicz
Jonathan G.A. Lageard
Andrew Hacket-Pain
Regula Gehrig Bichsel
Roberta Berretti
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Ascoli, Davide
Maringer, Janet
Hacket Pain, Andy
Conedera, Marco
Drobyshev, Igor
Motta, Renzo
Cirolli, Mara
Kantorowicz, Władysław
Zang, Christian
Schueler, Silvio
Croisé, Luc
Piussi, Pietro
Berretti, Roberta
Palaghianu, Ciprian
Westergren, Marjana
Lageard, Jonathan G. A
Burkart, Anton
Bichsel, Regula Gehrig
Thomas, Peter A
Beudert, Burkhard
Övergaard, Rolf
Vacchiano, Giorgio
Source :
ECOLOGY
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Wiley, 2017.

Abstract

Tree masting is one of the most intensively studied ecological processes. It affects nutrient fluxes of trees, regeneration dynamics in forests, animal population densities, and ultimately influences ecosystem services. Despite a large volume of research focused on masting, its evolutionary ecology, spatial and temporal variability and environmental drivers are still matter of debate. Understanding the proximate and ultimate causes of masting at broad spatial and temporal scales will enable us to predict tree reproductive strategies and their response to changing environment. Here we provide broad spatial (distribution range-wide) and temporal (century) masting data for the two main masting tree species in Europe, European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) and Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) H. Karst.). We collected masting data from a total of 359 sources through an extensive literature review and from unpublished surveys. The dataset has a total of 1747 series and 18348 yearly observations from 28 countries and covering a time span of years 1677-2016 and 1791-2016 for beech and spruce, respectively. For each record, the following information is available: identification code; species; year of observation; proxy of masting (flower, pollen, fruit, seed, dendrochronological reconstructions); statistical data type (ordinal, continuous); data value; unit of measurement (only in case of continuous data); geographical location (country, Nomenclature of Units for Territorial Statistics NUTS-1 level, municipality, coordinates); first and last record year and related length; type of data source (field survey, peer reviewed scientific literature, grey literature, personal observation); source identification code; date when data were added to the database; comments. To provide a ready-to-use masting index we harmonized ordinal data into five classes. Furthermore, we computed an additional field where continuous series with length >4 years where converted into a five classes ordinal index. To our knowledge, this is the most comprehensive published database on species-specific masting behaviour. It is useful to study spatial and temporal patterns of masting and its proximate and ultimate causes, to refine studies based on tree-ring chronologies, to understand dynamics of animal species and pests vectored by these animals affecting human health, and it may serve as calibration-validation data for dynamic forest models. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Details

ISSN :
00129658 and 16772016
Volume :
98
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b54e39ac35ec6d74a6eb602a951d72f8