Fish, amphibian, and conductance data from Panacea Unit, St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge, FL, 2009-2016
January 10, 2023
These data are meant to support a publication "Disentangling direct and indirect effects of extreme events on coastal wetland communities" in the Journal of Animal Ecology. This dataset contains both amphibian and fish observations based on our use of plastic minnow traps. Additionally we present (specific) conductance values observed during our trapping periods.
Citation Information
Publication Year | 2023 |
---|---|
Title | Fish, amphibian, and conductance data from Panacea Unit, St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge, FL, 2009-2016 |
DOI | 10.5066/P9N4YYCQ |
Authors | William J Barichivich, Courtney L. Davis, Susan Walls, Mary E Brown, David A.W. Miller |
Product Type | Data Release |
Record Source | USGS Asset Identifier Service (AIS) |
USGS Organization | Wetland and Aquatic Research Center - Gainesville, FL |
Rights | This work is marked with CC0 1.0 Universal |
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Disentangling direct and indirect effects of extreme events on coastal wetland communities
One of the primary ways in which climate change will impact coastal freshwater wetlands is through changes in the frequency, intensity, timing and distribution of extreme weather events. Disentangling the direct and indirect mechanisms of population- and community-level responses to extreme events is vital to predicting how species composition of coastal wetlands will change under future condition
Authors
Courtney L. Davis, Susan Walls, William Barichivich, Mary Brown, David A.W. Miller
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Susan Walls, Ph.D.
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Related
Disentangling direct and indirect effects of extreme events on coastal wetland communities
One of the primary ways in which climate change will impact coastal freshwater wetlands is through changes in the frequency, intensity, timing and distribution of extreme weather events. Disentangling the direct and indirect mechanisms of population- and community-level responses to extreme events is vital to predicting how species composition of coastal wetlands will change under future condition
Authors
Courtney L. Davis, Susan Walls, William Barichivich, Mary Brown, David A.W. Miller
William Barichivich
Wildlife Biologist
Wildlife Biologist
Email
Phone
Susan Walls, Ph.D.
Research Wildlife Biologist
Research Wildlife Biologist
Email
Phone