LTERN Data Portal
Nanangroe Plantation Plot Network: The Value of Countryside Elements in the Conservation of the Threatened Arboreal Marsupial Squirrel Glider Petaurus norfolcensis in Agricultural Landscapes of South-eastern Australia - the Disproportional Value of Scattered Trees, 2005
- Citation
-
Crane, M (): Nanangroe Plantation Plot Network: The Value of Countryside Elements in the Conservation of the Threatened Arboreal Marsupial Squirrel Glider Petaurus norfolcensis in Agricultural Landscapes of South-eastern Australia - the Disproportional Value of Scattered Trees, 2005. Long Term Ecological Research Network. http://www.ltern.org.au/knb/metacat/ltern2.80.21/html
- Identifier
-
- docid
- ltern2.80.21
- Data Creators
-
- Individual
- Mr Mason Crane
- Position
- Senior Research Officer
- Organization
- The Australian National University
- Abstract
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Human activities, particularly agriculture, have transformed much of the world’s terrestrial environment. Within these anthropogenic landscapes, a variety of relictual and semi-natural habitats exist, which we term countryside elements. The habitat value of countryside elements (‘elements’) is increasingly recognised. In association with the Nanangroe Plot network in the South-West Slopes of New South Wales, we quantify the relative value of four kinds of such ‘elements’ (linear roadside remnants, native vegetation patches, scattered trees and tree plantings) used by a threatened Australian arboreal marsupial, the squirrel glider Petaurus norfolcensis. We examined relationships between home range size and the availability of each ‘element’ and whether the actual usage was relative to predicted levels of usage. The usage of ‘elements’ by gliders was largely explained by their availability, however there was a preference for native vegetation patches and scattered trees. We found home range size was significantly smaller with increasing area of scattered trees and a contrasting effect with increasing area of linear roadside remnants or native vegetation patches. Our work showed that each ‘element’ was used and as such had a role in the conservation of the squirrel glider, but their relative value varied. We illustrate the need to assess the conservation value of countryside elements so they can be incorporated into the holistic management of agricultural landscapes. This work demonstrates the disproportional value of scattered trees, underscoring the need to specifically incorporate and /or enhance the protection and recruitment of scattered trees in biodiversity conservation policy and management. (Crane, M.J., Lindenmayer, D.B., Cunningham, R.B., 2014. The Value of Countryside Elements in the Conservation of a Threatened Arboreal Marsupial Petaurus norfolcensis in Agricultural Landscapes of South-Eastern Australia—The Disproportional Value of Scattered Trees. PLOS One. 9(9): e107178 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107178).
- Contacts for Questions on the Use and Interpretation of Data
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- Individual
- Mr Mason Crane
- Position
- Senior Research Officer
- Organization
- The Australian National University
- Address
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Fenner School of Environment and Society
The Australian National University
Canberra. ACT 0200
- Phone
-
- voice
- 0427770594
- Email Address
- mason.crane@anu.edu.au
- Project Information and Data Owners
-
- Title
- Nanangroe Plantation Plot Network
- Personnel
-
- Role
- Principal Investigator
- Individual
- Mr Mason Crane
- Position
- Senior Research Officer
- Organization
- The Australian National University
- Role
- Content Provider
- Individual
- Professor David Lindenmayer
- Position
- Principal Investigator
- Organization
- Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National University
- Methods and Sampling Information
-
- Methods
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Method Step 1
- Description
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Data Collection (spatial data)
The area of each countryside element available to an individual squirrel glider was calculated by measuring the total area of woody vegetation attributed to that ‘element’, within a 1000 m radius of the centre point of all fixes for each individual glider. A 1000 m radius was used, as 2000 m is approximately the maximum home range length that has been reported for this species (van der Ree and Bennett, 2003). The area of woody vegetation was measured using geographical information systems software (ArcGIS 9.2- Esri) to draw polygons over the canopy of woody vegetation interpreted from satellite imagery (SPOT5- Astrium GEO). Woody vegetation isolated by a gap distance of greater than 70 meters was considered unavailable to the glider (van der Ree et al., 2004).
- Instrument
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- ArcGIS 9.2- Esri, SPOT5- Astrium GEO
Method Step 2- Description
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Plot setup
Sites were selected on the basis of having squirrel gliders present and also to ensure we had 5 spatial independent sites, each encapsulating a number of different countryside elements.
Method Step 3- Description
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Data collection (radio- tracking data)
We captured gliders using drop-door, wire mesh cage traps (170 mm x 200 mm x 500 mm) over a three night period at each site in March 2005 (Crane et al., 2008). We fitted 32 gliders with a single stage brass loop radio transmitter, weighing 4.5 grams (Sirtrack, New Zealand). Gliders were radio-tracked to their diurnal denning site at least twice a week and to a nocturnal location at least 1-3 times a fortnight, over a 4-5 month period (Crane et al., 2008; Crane et al., 2012). For each fix, we recorded the countryside element in which the glider was located.
- Instrument
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- single stage brass loop radio transmitter, weighing 4.5 grams (Sirtrack, New Zealand).
- Sampling
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- Study Extent Description
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Our investigation encompassed five study areas within the south-west slopes of New South Wales, Australia (Fig. 1). The region is the most extensively and intensively disturbed of the 13 botanical regions of NSW, with an estimated 85% of the original cover of native vegetation removed in the past 200 years (Benson, 2008). The five study areas were located in heavily modified agricultural landscapes, used predominantly for livestock grazing and dryland cropping. Study areas were approximately 3km x 3km. Woody vegetation occurred primarily as relictual scattered paddock trees, native vegetation plantings and remnant temperate Eucalyptus woodlands on private lands, road reserves and travelling stock reserves.
- Sampling Description
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Radio tracking data was collected between March and July 2005, mapping was developed in 2013 from 2005 SPOT5 imagery.
- Associated Parties
-
- Role
- Content Provider
- Individual
- Professor David Lindenmayer
- Position
- Principal Investigator
- Organization
- Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National University
- Role
- Content Provider
- Individual
- Dr Ross Cunningham
- Organization
- Fenner School of Environment and Society
- Keywords and Subject Categories
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- Keywords List
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- Petaurus norfolcensis
- countryside elements
- home-range
- LTERN Monitoring Themes
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- Vegetation structure
- ANZSRC-FOR Codes
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- 0602 Ecology
- GCMD Science Keywords
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- Earth Science > Biosphere > Vegetation
- Geographic Coverage
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- Geographic Description
- South-West Slopes of New South Wales, Australia
- Bounding Coordinates
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- West
- 146.5718 degrees
- East
- 147.8947 degrees
- North
- -34.9758 degrees
- South
- -36.0574 degrees
- Temporal Coverage
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- Date
- 2005
- Taxonomic Coverage and Classification
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- Classification
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-
- Genus
- Petaurus
- Species
- norfolcensis (Squirrel glider)
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- Intellectual Rights, Licence and Usage Conditions
-
TERN-BY-ND
- Data Table
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Countryside elements in the conservation of the threatened arboreal marsupial Squirrel Glider Petaurus norfolcensis in agricultural landscapes of south-eastern Australia (P206T462)
- Name
- Countryside elements in the conservation of the threatened arboreal marsupial Squirrel Glider Petaurus norfolcensis in agricultural landscapes of south-eastern Australia (P206T462)
- Description
- Countryside elements in the conservation of the threatened arboreal marsupial Squirrel Glider Petaurus norfolcensis in agricultural landscapes of south-eastern Australia Data
- Attribute Information
-
Animal
- Name
- Animal
- Definition
- Individual animal code.
- Measurement Type
- nominal
- Measurement Domain
-
- Text Domain
-
- Definition
- text
Sex- Name
- Sex
- Definition
- Sex of animal.
- Measurement Type
- nominal
- Measurement Domain
-
- Enumerated Domain
-
- Code Definition
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- F
- Female
- M
- Male
Weight- Name
- Weight
- Definition
- Animal weights (missing value denotes weights not recorded).
- Measurement Type
- interval
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- gram
- Number Type
- natural
Total number of fixes- Name
- Total number of fixes
- Definition
- Number of radio tracking fixes.
- Measurement Type
- interval
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- number
- Number Type
- natural
NVP_DD- Name
- NVP_DD
- Definition
- Usage in "native vegetation" patch denoted by number of diurnal radio tracking fixes for individual animal.
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- number
- Number Type
- whole
TP_DD- Name
- TP_DD
- Definition
- Usage in "tree planting" area denoted by number of diurnal radio tracking fixes for individual animal.
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- number
- Number Type
- whole
LRR_DD- Name
- LRR_DD
- Definition
- Usage in "linear roadside remnant" denoted by number of diurnal radio tracking fixes for individual animal.
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- number
- Number Type
- whole
ST_DD- Name
- ST_DD
- Definition
- Usage in "scattered trees" area denoted by number of diurnal radio tracking fixes for individual animal.
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- number
- Number Type
- whole
NVP_N- Name
- NVP_N
- Definition
- Usage in "native vegetation patches" denoted by number of nocturnal radio tracking fixes for individual animal.
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- number
- Number Type
- whole
TP_N- Name
- TP_N
- Definition
- Usage in "tree planting" area denoted by number of nocturnal radio tracking fixes for individual animal.
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- number
- Number Type
- whole
LRR_N- Name
- LRR_N
- Definition
- Usage in "linear roadside remnant" denoted by number of nocturnal radio tracking fixes for individual animal.
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- number
- Number Type
- whole
ST_N- Name
- ST_N
- Definition
- Usage in "scattered trees" area denoted by number of nocturnal radio tracking fixes for individual animal.
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- number
- Number Type
- whole
NVP_W- Name
- NVP_W
- Definition
- Woody vegetation within 1 km radius (native vegetation patches).
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
TP_W- Name
- TP_W
- Definition
- Woody vegetation within 1 km radius (tree plantings).
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
LRR_W- Name
- LRR_W
- Definition
- Woody vegetation within 1 km radius (linear roadside remnant).
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
ST_W- Name
- ST_W
- Definition
- Woody vegetation within 1 km radius (scattered trees).
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
Total_W- Name
- Total_W
- Definition
- Woody vegetation within 1 km radius (all woody vegetation).
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
NVP_AvW- Name
- NVP_AvW
- Definition
- Woody vegetation (native vegetation patches) within 1 km radius, excluding vegetation isolated (>70 m gaps).
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
TP_AvW- Name
- TP_AvW
- Definition
- Woody vegetation (tree plantings) within 1 km radius, excluding vegetation isolated (>70 m gaps).
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
LRR_AvW- Name
- LRR_AvW
- Definition
- Woody vegetation (linear roadside remnants) within 1 km radius, excluding vegetation isolated (>70 m gaps).
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
ST_AvW- Name
- ST_AvW
- Definition
- Woody vegetation (scattered trees) within 1 km radius, excluding vegetation isolated (>70 m gaps).
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
Total_AvW- Name
- Total_AvW
- Definition
- Woody vegetation (all woody vegetation) within 1 km radius, excluding vegetation isolated (>70 m gaps).
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
HOME RANGE 100%_est- Name
- HOME RANGE 100%_est
- Definition
- Estimated home range of individual animals using grid cell method - 100% of fixes used in calculation. Asterisk denotes insufficient fixes.
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
HOME RANGE 95%_est- Name
- HOME RANGE 95%_est
- Definition
- Estimated home range of individual animals using grid cell method - 95% of fixes used in calculation. Asterisk denotes insufficient fixes.
- Measurement Type
- ratio
- Measurement Domain
-
- Standard Unit
- hectare
- Number Type
- real
- Number Of Records
- 32
- Physical Structure Description
-
- Object Name
- lngr_marsupial_data_2013.csv
- Size
- 2965 byte
- Text Format
-
- Number of Header Lines
- 1
- Record Delimiter
- #x0A
- Attribute Orientation
- column
- Simple Delimited
-
- Field Delimiter
- ,
- Distribution
-
Online
- URL
- ltern2.81.1
- Access
-
- Access Control
-
- Auth System
- knb
- Order
- allowFirst
- Allow:
-
Permission Principal [read] cn=allusers,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org [all] cn=submitters,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org
- Additional Metadata Links
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additionalLinksAdditional Metadata : additionalLinks
- Metadata
-
- additionalLinks
-
- url
-
- @name
- Nanangroe Plantation Plot Network homepage
- Access
-
- Access Control
-
- Auth System
- knb
- Order
- allowFirst
- Allow:
-
Permission Principal [read] public [read] uid=crane,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org [read] uid=bossard,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org [read] uid=lindenmayer,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org [all] cn=submitters,o=unaffiliated,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org
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