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Long‐term individual‐level population dynamics of a native desert chamaephyte
Author(s) -
Salguero-Gómez Roberto,
Kempenich Helen,
Forseth Irwin N.,
Casper Brenda B.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.144
H-Index - 294
eISSN - 1939-9170
pISSN - 0012-9658
DOI - 10.1890/13-1256.1
Subject(s) - ecology , population , climate change , geography , term (time) , tipping point (physics) , precipitation , biology , demography , meteorology , physics , quantum mechanics , sociology , electrical engineering , engineering
Long‐term data sets of population dynamics of plants are scarce, yet provide valuable information for addressing critical ecological and evolutionary questions. Such data can be used to determine how climate change affects demographic viability and evolutionary stable demographic strategies. Here we provide a long‐term data set with longitudinal (1997–2012) individual records for 3835 plants of the chamaephyte Cryptantha flava L. (A. Nelson) Payson (Boraginaceae) near Redfleet State Park in Uintah County, Utah, USA (40°35′42.63″ N, 109°25′55.92″ W, 1790 m a.s.l.). We used permanent plots to track the individual responses (survival, changes in size, reproduction, and recruitment) to artificial manipulations of precipitation via rainout shelters in 1998 and 1999 in subsets of those plots. These data provide unique opportunities to examine the effect of ambient climatic variation and interpret longer‐term climate change effects on native plant species' population dynamics in interaction with the surrounding plant communities. We provide the following data and data formats: (1) monthly background precipitation and temperature at the closest permanent weather station, (2) individual‐level population dynamics from 1997 to 2012 with point location ( x, y coordinates) of the individuals of C. flava within the permanent plots as well as microhabitat conditions, and (3) geo‐referenced location of each permanent plot.

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