Data for: How Should We Measure the DBH of Multi-Stemmed Urban Trees?

Main Author: Magarik, Yasha
Other Authors: Henning, Jason, Roman, Lara
Format: Dataset
Terbitan: Mendeley , 2019
Subjects:
Online Access: https:/data.mendeley.com/datasets/xckyh5nw2c
ctrlnum 0.17632-xckyh5nw2c.1
fullrecord <?xml version="1.0"?> <dc><creator>Magarik, Yasha</creator><title>Data for: How Should We Measure the DBH of Multi-Stemmed Urban Trees?</title><publisher>Mendeley</publisher><description>This dataset contains intensive measurements, as well as locational data, on 569 street trees in Philadelphia, PA, USA, taken in the summer of 2017, in the course of field research for the article &#x201C;How Should We Measure the DBH of Multi-Stemmed Urban Trees?&#x201D; Some base data (e.g., year and season of planting, cultivar) is from the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society's planting records of 2003-2015, from which the Target trees were drawn (cf. article for methodology). The .xlsx file has two worksheets: the data itself, and an extensive metadata tab that explains each column&#x2019;s contents. The trees themselves are from three genera (Malus, Prunus, and Zelkova); some trees&#x2019; cultivar is known (and noted in the dataset); others are unknown, and noted as such. The measurements include mm-accuracy stem diameters taken at a variety of heights (with all heights recorded to the nearest cm), total height and crown width in two directions, as well as a number of environmental and cultivation-linked variables (crown light exposure, vigor, soil dimensions and competing trees, pruning impacts, etc.). This dataset could be used to further explore some of the questions about crown architecture raised by previous researchers. Such questions include urban street tree crown eccentricities (McPherson et al., 2016), environmental characteristics associated with multi-stemmed trees (Bellingham and Sparrow, 2009; Dunphy et al., 2000; Stokes et al., 2011), crown width/DBH relationships (Hemery, 2005), and basal area relationships above and below forking (Mat&#xE9;rn, 1990; Minamino and Tateno, 2014; Murray, 1927). Because we also gathered data for each tree pertaining to vigor, crown light exposure, available soil area, and other characteristics, other researchers could use our dataset to examine the roles that such characteristics play in tree sizing and crown architecture. One key question for researchers is which characteristics of allometry transfer from rural to urban forests&#x2014;and which need amendment or replacement for urban application (McHale et al. 2009).</description><subject>Forest Biomass</subject><subject>Urban Forestry</subject><subject>Allometry</subject><contributor>Henning, Jason</contributor><contributor>Roman, Lara</contributor><type>Other:Dataset</type><identifier>10.17632/xckyh5nw2c.1</identifier><rights>Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International</rights><rights>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0</rights><relation>https:/data.mendeley.com/datasets/xckyh5nw2c</relation><date>2019-11-27T04:27:33Z</date><recordID>0.17632-xckyh5nw2c.1</recordID></dc>
format Other:Dataset
Other
author Magarik, Yasha
author2 Henning, Jason
Roman, Lara
title Data for: How Should We Measure the DBH of Multi-Stemmed Urban Trees?
publisher Mendeley
publishDate 2019
topic Forest Biomass
Urban Forestry
Allometry
url https:/data.mendeley.com/datasets/xckyh5nw2c
contents This dataset contains intensive measurements, as well as locational data, on 569 street trees in Philadelphia, PA, USA, taken in the summer of 2017, in the course of field research for the article “How Should We Measure the DBH of Multi-Stemmed Urban Trees?” Some base data (e.g., year and season of planting, cultivar) is from the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society's planting records of 2003-2015, from which the Target trees were drawn (cf. article for methodology). The .xlsx file has two worksheets: the data itself, and an extensive metadata tab that explains each column’s contents. The trees themselves are from three genera (Malus, Prunus, and Zelkova); some trees’ cultivar is known (and noted in the dataset); others are unknown, and noted as such. The measurements include mm-accuracy stem diameters taken at a variety of heights (with all heights recorded to the nearest cm), total height and crown width in two directions, as well as a number of environmental and cultivation-linked variables (crown light exposure, vigor, soil dimensions and competing trees, pruning impacts, etc.). This dataset could be used to further explore some of the questions about crown architecture raised by previous researchers. Such questions include urban street tree crown eccentricities (McPherson et al., 2016), environmental characteristics associated with multi-stemmed trees (Bellingham and Sparrow, 2009; Dunphy et al., 2000; Stokes et al., 2011), crown width/DBH relationships (Hemery, 2005), and basal area relationships above and below forking (Matérn, 1990; Minamino and Tateno, 2014; Murray, 1927). Because we also gathered data for each tree pertaining to vigor, crown light exposure, available soil area, and other characteristics, other researchers could use our dataset to examine the roles that such characteristics play in tree sizing and crown architecture. One key question for researchers is which characteristics of allometry transfer from rural to urban forests—and which need amendment or replacement for urban application (McHale et al. 2009).
id IOS7969.0.17632-xckyh5nw2c.1
institution Universitas Islam Indragiri
affiliation onesearch.perpusnas.go.id
institution_id 804
institution_type library:university
library
library Teknologi Pangan UNISI
library_id 2816
collection Artikel mulono
repository_id 7969
city INDRAGIRI HILIR
province RIAU
shared_to_ipusnas_str 1
repoId IOS7969
first_indexed 2020-04-08T08:18:08Z
last_indexed 2020-04-08T08:18:08Z
recordtype dc
_version_ 1686587421684137984
score 17.538404