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Bird response to the size and isolation of unburnt residuals at Pinkawillinie CP, South Australia

The dataset describes the occurrence of bird species at sites within a burnt woodland. These sites comprise the following design: 5 replicate block. each with 2 large patch sites, 2 small patch sites and 2 matrix sites. One site of each pair was relatively more isolated than the other (surrounded by a higher proportion of unburnt vegetation). In addition, there are also 6 sites located beyond the extent of the fire. The data-set also lists vegetation attributes at each of these sites.

Simple

Identification info

Date (Creation)
2010-09-01
Date (Publication)
2014-12-08
Date (Revision)
2014-07-14
Edition
1.0

Identifier

Title
DataCite
Code
doi:10.4227/05/548541119D331
Codespace
http://dx.doi.org

Publisher

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097

Author

Fenner School of Environment & Society, Australian National University - Berry, Laurence ()
Building 141, Linnaeus Way, Canberra, ACT, 2601, Australia
Canberra
ACT
2601
Australia
+61 2 6246 5588
Website
https://www.tern.org.au/

Purpose
Fire managers are engaged with the concept that retaining small unburnt residual areas of vegetation within extensively burnt landscapes may facilitate biodiversity conservation. However, it remains uncertain how the size and isolation of these unburnt residuals influence faunal distributions, persistence and recovery following fire. We observed bird responses to the size and isolation of unburnt residuals in a Mallee woodland area recently burnt by fire in southern Australia. Within five replicated spatial blocks, we crossed two levels of isolation with large (57ha) and small (13ha) unburnt patches and matrix sites burnt five years previously. We compared these site types to six continuous (non-fragmented) unburnt sites. We surveyed each site on eight occasions. Most birds occurred more frequently in unburnt habitat beyond the extent of the fire. Bird responses to the availability and spatial distribution of unburnt remnants within the fire were largely influenced by their ability to use the recently burnt matrix. Bird occurrence was higher in unburnt residuals when less unburnt habitat was available within 500 m.
Credit
We at TERN acknowledge the Traditional Owners and Custodians throughout Australia, New Zealand and all nations. We honour their profound connections to land, water, biodiversity and culture and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and emerging.
Status
Completed

Point of contact

Fenner School of Environment & Society, Australian National University - Berry, Laurence ()
Building 141, Linnaeus Way, Canberra, ACT, 2601, Australia
Building 141, Linnaeus Way
Canberra
ACT
2601
Australia
02 6249 9182/9781
Topic category
  • Biota

Extent

Description
The study was conducted within the 2005 fire scar at Pinkawillinie Conservation Park on the Eyre Peninsula, South Australia.
N
S
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Temporal extent

Time period
2010-09-01 2010-12-20
Maintenance and update frequency
Not planned
GCMD Science Keywords
  • BIRDS
  • POPULATION DYNAMICS
  • FIRE ECOLOGY
  • HABITAT CONVERSION/FRAGMENTATION
ANZSRC Fields of Research
  • Conservation and biodiversity
TERN Parameter Vocabulary
  • field species name
  • Unitless
  • treatment presence
  • Unitless
  • treatment count
  • Unitless
QUDT Units of Measure
  • Unitless
  • Unitless
  • Unitless
GCMD Horizontal Resolution Ranges
  • 10 km - < 50 km or approximately .09 degree - < .5 degree
GCMD Temporal Resolution Ranges
  • Subannual
Keywords (Discipline)
  • Ecosystem Assessment And Management (9605)
  • Flora, Fauna And Biodiversity (9608)
  • Flora, Fauna and Biodiversity at Regional or Larger Scales (960805)
  • Dune Systems
  • Fire
  • Ground Cover
  • Vegetation Structure

Resource constraints

Use limitation
The Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license allows others to copy, distribute, display, and create derivative works provided that they credit the original source and any other nominated parties. Details are provided at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
File name
88x31.png
File description
CCBy Logo from creativecommons.org
File type
png
Linkage
https://w3id.org/tern/static/cc-by/88x31.png

Title
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence
Alternate title
CC-BY
Edition
4.0
Website
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Access constraints
License
Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
TERN services are provided on an "as-is" and "as available" basis. Users use any TERN services at their discretion and risk. They will be solely responsible for any damage or loss whatsoever that results from such use including use of any data obtained through TERN and any analysis performed using the TERN infrastructure. <br />Web links to and from external, third party websites should not be construed as implying any relationships with and/or endorsement of the external site or its content by TERN. <br /><br />Please advise any work or publications that use this data via the online form at https://www.tern.org.au/research-publications/#reporting
Other constraints
Please cite this dataset as {Author} ({PublicationYear}). {Title}. {Version, as appropriate}. Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network. Dataset. {Identifier}.
Other constraints
(C)2014 Australian National University. Rights owned by Australian National University.

Resource constraints

Classification
Unclassified

Distribution Information

Distributor

Distributor

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097
OnLine resource
spatial_data

Distribution Information

Distributor

Distributor

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097
OnLine resource
Raw_bird_survey

Resource lineage

Statement
Timed-active search: We used the timed active-search method to survey birds. We recorded all birds observed by sight or heard within a 30-minute period; excluding those observed flying overhead.. A 3-ha search area was used at burnt matrix and continuous unburnt sites as it was representative of mean unburnt patch size. We conducted surveys between 28th September and 17th November 2010 to coincide with peak breeding season, when birds are most detectable. We completed surveys between 06:00 and 12:00 (Australian Standard Daylight Saving Time) and did not survey on days of heavy rain or strong wind. One observer surveyed each site eight times, on eight different mornings, each separated by at least one week. The timing of site surveys was varied upon each revisit, reducing possible sampling time bias.
Hierarchy level
Dataset

Reference System Information

Reference system identifier
EPSG/EPSG:3577

Reference system type
Geodetic Geographic 2D

Metadata

Metadata identifier
urn:uuid/4bfba32f-29de-496e-9ea5-b032263722a3

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Point of contact

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097

Type of resource

Resource scope
Dataset
Metadata linkage
https://geonetwork.tern.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/4bfba32f-29de-496e-9ea5-b032263722a3

Point-of-truth metadata URL

Date info (Creation)
2022-07-11T00:00:00
Date info (Revision)
2022-07-11T03:03:08

Metadata standard

Title
ISO 19115-1:2014/AMD 1:2018 Geographic information - Metadata - Fundamentals
Edition
1

Metadata standard

Title
ISO/TS 19115-3:2016
Edition
1.0

Metadata standard

Title
ISO/TS 19157-2:2016
Edition
1.0
Title
Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN) Metadata Profile of ISO 19115-3:2016 and ISO 19157-2:2016
Date (published)
2021
Edition
1.0

Identifier

Code
10.5281/zenodo.5652221
Website
https://github.com/ternaustralia/TERN-ISO19115/releases/tag/v1.0

 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

N
S
E
W


Keywords

ANZSRC Fields of Research
Conservation and biodiversity
GCMD Science Keywords
BIRDS FIRE ECOLOGY HABITAT CONVERSION/FRAGMENTATION POPULATION DYNAMICS

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Associated resources

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