LTERN Data Portal
Victorian Alpine Plot Network (Alpine Summit Plots): Vegetation Life-form Data, South-East Highlands, Australia, 2004
- Citation
-
Morgan, J; Hoffmann, A (): Victorian Alpine Plot Network (Alpine Summit Plots): Vegetation Life-form Data, South-East Highlands, Australia, 2004. Long Term Ecological Research Network. http://www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern.368.9/html
- Identifier
-
- docid
- ltern.368.9
- Data Creators
-
- Individual
- Dr John Morgan
- Organization
- La Trobe University
- Individual
- Professor Ary Hoffmann
- Organization
- The University of Melbourne
- Abstract
-
This Victorian Alpine Plot Network Vegetation Life Form Data Package comprises line intercept data for alpine mountain summits in the Australian Alps. For each mountain summit, four varying length permanent transects have been established. These transects extend downslope, along each cardinal and inter-cardinal directions, to a point situated 5 altitudinal metres below the summit. Along each transect, plant and substrate attributes recorded include dominant life form classes, the ‘presence’ of dominant plant species and substrate ‘type’ when vegetation is absent. This study, which commenced in 2001, forms part of the collection of data packages by the Victorian Alpine Plot Network. A synopsis of related data packages which have been collected as part of the Victorian Alpine Plot Network’s full program is provided at http://www.ltern.org.au/index.php/ltern-plot-networks/victorian-alpine.
- Contacts for Questions on the Use and Interpretation of Data
-
- Individual
- Dr John Morgan
- Organization
- La Trobe University
- Address
-
Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environment
La Trobe University
Bundoora. Vic 3086
- Phone
-
- voice
- 03 9479 2226
- Email Address
- J.Morgan@latrobe.edu.au
- Project Information and Data Owners
-
- Title
- Victorian Alpine Plot Network
- Personnel
-
- Role
- Data Owner
- Organization
- La Trobe University
- Role
- Principal Investigator
- Individual
- Professor Ary Hoffmann
- Organization
- The University of Melbourne
- Role
- Content Provider
- Individual
- Dr John Morgan
- Organization
- La Trobe University
- Role
- Content Provider
- Individual
- Dr Henrik Wahren
- Organization
- Department of Botany, La Trobe University
- Funding
-
Australian Geographic and Holsworth Fund
- Methods and Sampling Information
-
- Methods
-
Method Step 1
- Description
-
Plot Setup
For each mountain summit, four variable length permanent transects have been established that run from the summit, downslope, to a contour 5 m in elevation below the highest point (the ‘-5 m contour’). Transects run from the summit to the north, south, west and east.
- Instrument
-
- None specified
Method Step 2- Description
-
Data Collection
Along each transect, line intercepts (to the nearest centimetre) are recorded for each of the dominant classes (grasses, herbs, shrubs), noting dominant species, as well as ground cover condition when vegetation is absent (bare ground, rock). These data are converted to percentage cover per transect to detect structural changes.
- Instrument
-
- None specified
- Sampling
-
- Study Extent Description
-
No limitations or missing units in temporal coverage have been referred to in the Conceptual Design.
- Sampling Description
-
A global climate change and mountain environments monitoring network - The Global Observation Research Initiative in Alpine Environments (GLORIA; http://www.gloria.ac.at) - was established in 2001 to detect long-term vegetation change on alpine mountain summits. Observations focus on changes in species richness with respect to local temperatures and altitude. Five mountain summit survey sites were established in the Kosciuszko National Park in 2004 and several in the Victorian Alpine National Park in 2006. There are currently 12 such summits, encompassing the geographic distribution of high alpine summits in the Australian Alps, with each to be surveyed at 5-year intervals.
- Associated Parties
-
- Role
- Content Provider
- Individual
- Dr Susanna Venn
- Position
- Network Contact
- Organization
- Department of Botany, La Trobe University
- Keywords and Subject Categories
-
- GCMD Science Keywords
-
- Biological Classification > Plants
- Biosphere > Biosphere > Terrestrial Ecosystems > Alpine/Tundra
- Keywords List
-
- Species richness
- Alpine National Park
- Alpine summits
- Dominant classes
- Compositional changes
- LTERN Monitoring Themes
-
- Vegetation structure
- Plant species composition
- Plant species abundance
- Individual plants
- ANZSRC-FOR Codes
-
- 0602 Ecology
- Geographic Coverage
-
- Geographic Description
- Alpine Summit, Australian Alps
- Bounding Coordinates
-
- West
- 146.4542 degrees
- East
- 147.30667 degrees
- North
- -36.7325 degrees
- South
- -37.13255 degrees
- Temporal Coverage
-
- Date Begin
- 2003-12-23
- Date End
- 2004-04-19
- Intellectual Rights, Licence and Usage Conditions
-
CC-BY-4_0 Special Conditions No specific attribution required. Citation details as displayed in the LTERN Data Portal (http://www.ltern.org.au/knb/) Spatial coordinates for site names are available at https://www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern6.304/html (Victorian Alpine Plot Network (Alpine Summit Plots): Plot Details - Spatial Coordinates for Vegetation Data, South-East Highlands, Australia).
- Data Table
-
- Name
- vasp_vegetation_life-form_cover_2004_p179t103.csv
- Description
- Victorian Alpine Plot Network Alpine/ Sub-alpine Vegetation Life-form Data.
- Attribute Information
-
date
- Name
- date
- Definition
- Date of record
- Measurement Type
- dateTime
- Measurement Domain
-
- Format
- YYYY-MM-DD
site- Name
- site
- Definition
- Site characteristic: Alpine Summit transect location
- Measurement Type
- nominal
- Measurement Domain
-
- Text Domain
-
- Definition
- Text
metres- Name
- metres
- Definition
- Distance along transect
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- meter
- Number Type
- real
direction- Name
- direction
- Definition
- Cardinal and sub-cardinal points
- Measurement Type
- ordinal
- Measurement Domain
-
- Text Domain
-
- Definition
- Character
cover- Name
- cover
- Definition
- Dominant vegetation class and substrate type. NA is used for data that has not been collected, as the transects vary in length and measurements are not taken at every distance.
- Measurement Type
- nominal
- Measurement Domain
-
- Text Domain
-
- Definition
- Character
- Number Of Records
- 32001
- Physical Structure Description
-
- Object Name
- vasp_vegetation_life-form_cover_2004_p179t103.csv
- Size
- 1348306 byte
- Text Format
-
- Number of Header Lines
- 1
- Record Delimiter
- #x0A
- Attribute Orientation
- column
- Simple Delimited
-
- Field Delimiter
- ,
- Distribution
-
Online
- URL
- ltern.369.2
- Access
-
- Access Control
-
- Auth System
- knb
- Order
- allowFirst
- Allow:
-
Permission Principal [all] cn=submitters,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org [read] cn=pn_vic_alpine,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org [read] cn=allusers,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org
- Additional Metadata Links
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additionalLinksAdditional Metadata : additionalLinks
- Metadata
-
- additionalLinks
-
- url
-
- @name
- Victorian Alpine Plot Network
- Access
-
- Access Control
-
- Auth System
- knb
- Order
- allowFirst
- Allow:
-
Permission Principal [read] public [all] cn=submitters,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org [read] cn=pn_vic_alpine,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org
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