Date Range:
Monday, June 1, 1981 to Monday, December 1, 1986
Publication Date:
Tuesday, January 17, 2023
Relate effects of soil, grazing intensity and burning treatments on the establishment and subsequent growth of woody plants in prairie communities and how these factors affect the prairie-forest boundary.
Watersheds Sampled:
1981: 020B, 020C, 020D, 001A, 001D, 004B, 004F, 004G, 004H, 010D, 033A, 033D, 099C.
1986: 020B, 020C, 020D, 001A, 002D, 001D, 004B, 004F, 004G, 004H, 010D, 033A, 033D, 099C, N20B, N01B, N04A, N04D.
1991: 001D, 002D, 004B, 020B, N01B, N04D,N20B.
1996: 001D, 002D, 004B, 020B, 001A, 020A, N01B, N04D, N20B, 020C, 020D.
Frequency of Sampling: Beginning in 1981 and every five years thereafter.
Variable Measured: Location of each individual tree, shrub and patch of scrubs according to species and size
Methods: Each area is walked in parallel lines approximately 15-20 m apart. The locations of woody
vegetation are marked on a mylar overlay on a large-scale aerial photograph of the area being surveyed with a unique symbol for each species and a number for size. A real effort is made to detect young individuals in order to estimate when growth started and ascertain mortality in the early years. Species are coded by symbols and color. For trees, size is the height to the nearest meter above 2 m. For shrubs, the approximate diameter and shape of the patch is drawn on the overlay.
Form of Data Output: A GIS file is prepared for each watershed and the raw ASCII X,Y file coordinates are available for 1981 and 1986.
For additional metadata information see: http://lter.konza.ksu.edu/sites/default/files/DC.pdf
For additional methods information see: http://lter.konza.ksu.edu/sites/default/files/MM.pdf
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