Hawaii Volcanoes National Park plant-soil feedbacks and fire data, 2019
February 28, 2023
This data release includes metadata and tabular data that documents growth and root nodulation of Acacia koa and Sophora chrysophylla in different soil types. Soils contained innoculum from conspecific versus heterospecific plants and were taken from areas that had burned in the 2018 Keauhou fire versus areas that had not burned . All plants were grown and data were taken in 2019 in a shadehouse structure in Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park.
Citation Information
Publication Year | 2023 |
---|---|
Title | Hawaii Volcanoes National Park plant-soil feedbacks and fire data, 2019 |
DOI | 10.5066/P9W511KC |
Authors | Christopher Warneke, Stephanie G. Yelenik, Lars Brudvig |
Product Type | Data Release |
Record Source | USGS Asset Identifier Service (AIS) |
USGS Organization | Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center |
Rights | This work is marked with CC0 1.0 Universal |
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Fire modifies plant–soil feedbacks
Although plant–soil feedbacks (interactions between plants and soils, often mediated by soil microbes, abbreviated as PSFs) are widely known to influence patterns of plant diversity at local and landscape scales, these interactions are rarely examined in the context of important environmental factors. Resolving the roles of environmental factors is important because the environmental context may a
Authors
Christopher Warneke, Stephanie G. Yelenik, Lars Brudvig
Related
Fire modifies plant–soil feedbacks
Although plant–soil feedbacks (interactions between plants and soils, often mediated by soil microbes, abbreviated as PSFs) are widely known to influence patterns of plant diversity at local and landscape scales, these interactions are rarely examined in the context of important environmental factors. Resolving the roles of environmental factors is important because the environmental context may a
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Christopher Warneke, Stephanie G. Yelenik, Lars Brudvig