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  1. Book ; Online: Plant life of southwestern Australia

    Groom, Philip K. / Lamont, Byron B.

    adaptations for survival

    2015  

    Author's details Philip K. Groom ; Byron Lamont
    Language English
    Size 258 S. : Ill.
    Publisher de Gruyter Open
    Publishing place Warszaw u.a.
    Publishing country Poland
    Document type Book ; Online
    HBZ-ID HT018656022
    ISBN 978-3-11-037019-5 ; 978-3-11-039933-2 ; 9783110370164 ; 3-11-037019-0 ; 3-11-039933-4 ; 3110370166
    DOI 10.1515/9783110370195
    Database ZB MED Catalogue: Medicine, Health, Nutrition, Environment, Agriculture

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  2. Article ; Online: Rooting depth and plant water relations explain species distribution patterns within a sandplain landscape.

    Groom, Philip K

    Functional plant biology : FPB

    2020  Volume 31, Issue 5, Page(s) 423–428

    Abstract: Tree and shrub species of the Banksia woodlands on the sandplains of northern Swan Coastal Plain, Western Australia possess a range of strategies to avoid or tolerate soil water deficits during the annual summer drought. Shallow-rooted shrub species (< 1 ...

    Abstract Tree and shrub species of the Banksia woodlands on the sandplains of northern Swan Coastal Plain, Western Australia possess a range of strategies to avoid or tolerate soil water deficits during the annual summer drought. Shallow-rooted shrub species (< 1 m rooting depth) inhabit a range of locations in the landscape, from top of dune crests to wetland embankments. These are the most drought-tolerant of all sandplain species, surviving extremely low summer soil water potentials (< -7 MPa) and tissue water deficits by significantly reducing their transpirational water loss (< 0.2 mmol m
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-07-21
    Publishing country Australia
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2071582-1
    ISSN 1445-4416 ; 1445-4408
    ISSN (online) 1445-4416
    ISSN 1445-4408
    DOI 10.1071/FP03200
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: LMA, density and thickness: recognizing different leaf shapes and correcting for their nonlaminarity.

    Lamont, Byron B / Groom, Philip K / Williams, Matthew / He, Tianhua

    The New phytologist

    2015  Volume 207, Issue 4, Page(s) 942–947

    MeSH term(s) Adaptation, Physiological ; Biomass ; Confidence Intervals ; Plant Leaves/anatomy & histology ; Western Australia
    Language English
    Publishing date 2015-05-13
    Publishing country England
    Document type Letter
    ZDB-ID 208885-x
    ISSN 1469-8137 ; 0028-646X
    ISSN (online) 1469-8137
    ISSN 0028-646X
    DOI 10.1111/nph.13465
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Short Communication: Leaf trait relationships in Australian plant species.

    Wright, Ian J / Groom, Philip K / Lamont, Byron B / Poot, Pieter / Prior, Lynda D / Reich, Peter B / Schulze, E-Detlef / Veneklaas, Erik J / Westoby, Mark

    Functional plant biology : FPB

    2020  Volume 31, Issue 5, Page(s) 551–558

    Abstract: Leaf trait data were compiled for 258 Australian plant species from several habitat types dominated by woody perennials. Specific leaf area (SLA), photosynthetic capacity, dark respiration rate and leaf nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) concentrations were ...

    Abstract Leaf trait data were compiled for 258 Australian plant species from several habitat types dominated by woody perennials. Specific leaf area (SLA), photosynthetic capacity, dark respiration rate and leaf nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) concentrations were positively correlated with one another and negatively correlated with average leaf lifespan. These trait relationships were consistent with previous results from global datasets. Together, these traits form a spectrum of variation running from species with cheap but frequently replaced leaves to those with strategies more attuned to a nutrient-conserving lifestyle. Australian species tended to have SLAs at the lower end of the spectrum, as expected in a dataset dominated by sclerophyllous species from low fertility or low rainfall sites. The existence of broad-scale, 'global' relationships does not imply that the same trait relationships will always be observed in small datasets. In particular, the probability of observing concordant patterns depends on the range of trait variation in a dataset, which, itself, may vary with sample size or species-sampling properties such as the range of growth forms, plant functional 'types', or taxa included in a particular study. The considerable scatter seen in these broad-scale trait relationships may be associated with climate, physiology and phylogeny.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-07-21
    Publishing country Australia
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2071582-1
    ISSN 1445-4416 ; 1445-4408
    ISSN (online) 1445-4416
    ISSN 1445-4408
    DOI 10.1071/FP03212
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article: Regional and local effects on reproductive allocation in epicormic and lignotuberous populations of Banksia menziesii

    Groom, Philip K / Lamont, Byron B

    Plant ecology. 2011 Dec., v. 212, no. 12

    2011  

    Abstract: Reproductive allocation (RA) is a measure of how resources (biomass, nutrients) are partitioned between reproductive structures and the rest of the plant. For plants that resprout after fire, the percentage of resources allocated to reproduction may vary ...

    Abstract Reproductive allocation (RA) is a measure of how resources (biomass, nutrients) are partitioned between reproductive structures and the rest of the plant. For plants that resprout after fire, the percentage of resources allocated to reproduction may vary depending on their resprouting ability. Our study examines the percentage RA (biomass, N, P, K) and nutrient content of current season’s growth in southern (Swan Coastal Plain) epicormic and northern (Eneabba Plain) lignotuberous resprouter populations of Banksia menziesii (Proteaceae), a species endemic to nutrient-impoverished sandplains of southwestern Australia. Within each population, plants along road edges were compared with plants not associated with road edges. There was no difference in total nutrient content of current year’s growth between both resprouting types, except that total K in the shoots of lignotuberous populations was >2 times that in the epicormic populations. Non-road lignotuberous plants allocated twice the biomass, N and P, and 13.5 times the K, to reproduction as non-road epicormic plants. Lignotuberous populations had the highest RA (17–34% of biomass, N, P, K), with non-road epicormic populations the lowest RA (3–15%). This can be viewed as an adaptive (ultimate) response to the poorer postfire survival and recruitment conditions where the lignotuberous populations occur. Total biomass and nutrient content of road-edge plants was 2–3 times that of non-edge plants. Lignotuberous populations in both road positions allocated the same fraction of biomass, N and P to reproduction, whereas road-edge populations allocated 10% less K than non-road. Road-edge epicormic populations allocated 5–10% more biomass, N, P and K to reproduction than non-road populations. This can be viewed as an ecophysiological (proximate) response to the better growing conditions created by the roadways that may also ultimately have an adaptive explanation.
    Keywords Banksia ; biomass ; indigenous species ; nutrient content ; nutrients ; recruitment ; reproduction ; shoots
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2011-12
    Size p. 2003-2011.
    Publishing place Springer-Verlag
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 1364679-5
    ISSN 1573-5052 ; 1385-0237
    ISSN (online) 1573-5052
    ISSN 1385-0237
    DOI 10.1007/s11258-011-9935-x
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  6. Article: Phosphorus accumulation in Proteaceae seeds: a synthesis

    Groom, Philip K / Lamont, Byron B

    Plant and soil. 2010 Sept., v. 334, no. 1-2

    2010  

    Abstract: The family Proteaceae dominates the nutrient-poor, Mediterranean-climate floristic regions of southwestern Australia (SWA) and the Cape of South Africa. It is well-recognised that mediterranean Proteaceae have comparatively large seeds that are enriched ... ...

    Abstract The family Proteaceae dominates the nutrient-poor, Mediterranean-climate floristic regions of southwestern Australia (SWA) and the Cape of South Africa. It is well-recognised that mediterranean Proteaceae have comparatively large seeds that are enriched with phosphorus (P), stored mainly as salts of phytic acid in protein globoids. Seed P can contribute up to 48% of the total aboveground P, with the fraction allocated depending on the species fire response. For SWA species, 70-80% of P allocated to fruiting structures is invested in seeds, compared with 30-75% for Cape species, with SWA species storing on average 4.7 times more P per seed at twice the concentration. When soil P is less limiting for growth, seed P reserves may be less important for seedling establishment, and hence plants there tend to produce smaller seeds with less P. For Australian Hakea and Grevillea species the translocation of P from the fruit wall to the seed occurs in the days/weeks before final fruit dry mass is reached, and accounts for 4-36% of seed P. Seed P content increases with the level of serotiny, though it decreases marginally as a fraction of the total reproductive structure. The greater occurrence of serotiny and higher seed P content within the Proteaceae in SWA supports the notion that SWA soils are more P-impoverished than those of the Cape.
    Keywords Hakea ; Grevillea ; Banksia ; Protea ; Leucospermum
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2010-09
    Size p. 61-72.
    Publisher Springer Netherlands
    Publishing place Dordrecht
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 208908-7
    ISSN 1573-5036 ; 0032-079X
    ISSN (online) 1573-5036
    ISSN 0032-079X
    DOI 10.1007/s11104-009-0135-6
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  7. Article: Which common indices of sclerophylly best reflect differences in leaf structure?

    Groom, Philip K. / Lamont, Byron B.

    Écoscience. 1999 Jan. 1, v. 6, no. 3

    1999  

    Abstract: When describing the sclerophyllous nature of leaves, two indices are most commonly cited: fibre:protein ratio (FPR), better known as the Loveless sclerophylly index; and leaf mass per unit area (LMA), or its inverse, specific leaf area (SLA). Here, we ... ...

    Abstract When describing the sclerophyllous nature of leaves, two indices are most commonly cited: fibre:protein ratio (FPR), better known as the Loveless sclerophylly index; and leaf mass per unit area (LMA), or its inverse, specific leaf area (SLA). Here, we assess the relative importance of these two indices in accounting for changes in leaf structure, the primary basis for variations in sclerophylly. FPR compares structural (i.e., lignin and cellulose [crude fibre]) to non-structural (i.e., protein ≈ protoplasm) leaf material, on the basis that increasing sclerophylly is associated with a greater contribution of crude fibre and smaller contribution of protein to total dry weight. However, raising the crude fibre content is just one way of increasing sclerophylly, and a decrease in the nitrogen content (i.e., protein) does not contribute directly to the impression of leaf hardness. While FPR lacks a clear anatomical basis, it may provide a biochemical interpretation of sclerophylly. In contrast, LMA is the cross product of leaf thickness and leaf density, two (often independent) attributes that are linked to different components of a leaf’s anatomical/structural attributes. We show that FPR and LMA are often poorly correlated and conclude that LMA is a more useful measure of sclerophylly, especially when thickness and density are known.
    Keywords leaves ; texture ; leaf area ; fiber content ; protein content ; chemical constituents of plants
    Language English
    Dates of publication 1999-0101
    Size p. 471-474.
    Publishing place Taylor & Francis
    Document type Article
    ISSN 2376-7626
    DOI 10.1080/11956860.1999.11682537
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  8. Article ; Online: AusTraits, a curated plant trait database for the Australian flora.

    Falster, Daniel / Gallagher, Rachael / Wenk, Elizabeth H / Wright, Ian J / Indiarto, Dony / Andrew, Samuel C / Baxter, Caitlan / Lawson, James / Allen, Stuart / Fuchs, Anne / Monro, Anna / Kar, Fonti / Adams, Mark A / Ahrens, Collin W / Alfonzetti, Matthew / Angevin, Tara / Apgaua, Deborah M G / Arndt, Stefan / Atkin, Owen K /
    Atkinson, Joe / Auld, Tony / Baker, Andrew / von Balthazar, Maria / Bean, Anthony / Blackman, Chris J / Bloomfield, Keith / Bowman, David M J S / Bragg, Jason / Brodribb, Timothy J / Buckton, Genevieve / Burrows, Geoff / Caldwell, Elizabeth / Camac, James / Carpenter, Raymond / Catford, Jane A / Cawthray, Gregory R / Cernusak, Lucas A / Chandler, Gregory / Chapman, Alex R / Cheal, David / Cheesman, Alexander W / Chen, Si-Chong / Choat, Brendan / Clinton, Brook / Clode, Peta L / Coleman, Helen / Cornwell, William K / Cosgrove, Meredith / Crisp, Michael / Cross, Erika / Crous, Kristine Y / Cunningham, Saul / Curran, Timothy / Curtis, Ellen / Daws, Matthew I / DeGabriel, Jane L / Denton, Matthew D / Dong, Ning / Du, Pengzhen / Duan, Honglang / Duncan, David H / Duncan, Richard P / Duretto, Marco / Dwyer, John M / Edwards, Cheryl / Esperon-Rodriguez, Manuel / Evans, John R / Everingham, Susan E / Farrell, Claire / Firn, Jennifer / Fonseca, Carlos Roberto / French, Ben J / Frood, Doug / Funk, Jennifer L / Geange, Sonya R / Ghannoum, Oula / Gleason, Sean M / Gosper, Carl R / Gray, Emma / Groom, Philip K / Grootemaat, Saskia / Gross, Caroline / Guerin, Greg / Guja, Lydia / Hahs, Amy K / Harrison, Matthew Tom / Hayes, Patrick E / Henery, Martin / Hochuli, Dieter / Howell, Jocelyn / Huang, Guomin / Hughes, Lesley / Huisman, John / Ilic, Jugoslav / Jagdish, Ashika / Jin, Daniel / Jordan, Gregory / Jurado, Enrique / Kanowski, John / Kasel, Sabine / Kellermann, Jürgen / Kenny, Belinda / Kohout, Michele / Kooyman, Robert M / Kotowska, Martyna M / Lai, Hao Ran / Laliberté, Etienne / Lambers, Hans / Lamont, Byron B / Lanfear, Robert / van Langevelde, Frank / Laughlin, Daniel C / Laugier-Kitchener, Bree-Anne / Laurance, Susan / Lehmann, Caroline E R / Leigh, Andrea / Leishman, Michelle R / Lenz, Tanja / Lepschi, Brendan / Lewis, James D / Lim, Felix / Liu, Udayangani / Lord, Janice / Lusk, Christopher H / Macinnis-Ng, Cate / McPherson, Hannah / Magallón, Susana / Manea, Anthony / López-Martinez, Andrea / Mayfield, Margaret / McCarthy, James K / Meers, Trevor / van der Merwe, Marlien / Metcalfe, Daniel J / Milberg, Per / Mokany, Karel / Moles, Angela T / Moore, Ben D / Moore, Nicholas / Morgan, John W / Morris, William / Muir, Annette / Munroe, Samantha / Nicholson, Áine / Nicolle, Dean / Nicotra, Adrienne B / Niinemets, Ülo / North, Tom / O'Reilly-Nugent, Andrew / O'Sullivan, Odhran S / Oberle, Brad / Onoda, Yusuke / Ooi, Mark K J / Osborne, Colin P / Paczkowska, Grazyna / Pekin, Burak / Guilherme Pereira, Caio / Pickering, Catherine / Pickup, Melinda / Pollock, Laura J / Poot, Pieter / Powell, Jeff R / Power, Sally A / Prentice, Iain Colin / Prior, Lynda / Prober, Suzanne M / Read, Jennifer / Reynolds, Victoria / Richards, Anna E / Richardson, Ben / Roderick, Michael L / Rosell, Julieta A / Rossetto, Maurizio / Rye, Barbara / Rymer, Paul D / Sams, Michael A / Sanson, Gordon / Sauquet, Hervé / Schmidt, Susanne / Schönenberger, Jürg / Schulze, Ernst-Detlef / Sendall, Kerrie / Sinclair, Steve / Smith, Benjamin / Smith, Renee / Soper, Fiona / Sparrow, Ben / Standish, Rachel J / Staples, Timothy L / Stephens, Ruby / Szota, Christopher / Taseski, Guy / Tasker, Elizabeth / Thomas, Freya / Tissue, David T / Tjoelker, Mark G / Tng, David Yue Phin / de Tombeur, Félix / Tomlinson, Kyle / Turner, Neil C / Veneklaas, Erik J / Venn, Susanna / Vesk, Peter / Vlasveld, Carolyn / Vorontsova, Maria S / Warren, Charles A / Warwick, Nigel / Weerasinghe, Lasantha K / Wells, Jessie / Westoby, Mark / White, Matthew / Williams, Nicholas S G / Wills, Jarrah / Wilson, Peter G / Yates, Colin / Zanne, Amy E / Zemunik, Graham / Ziemińska, Kasia

    Scientific data

    2021  Volume 8, Issue 1, Page(s) 254

    Abstract: We introduce the AusTraits database - a compilation of values of plant traits for taxa in the Australian flora (hereafter AusTraits). AusTraits synthesises data on 448 traits across 28,640 taxa from field campaigns, published literature, taxonomic ... ...

    Abstract We introduce the AusTraits database - a compilation of values of plant traits for taxa in the Australian flora (hereafter AusTraits). AusTraits synthesises data on 448 traits across 28,640 taxa from field campaigns, published literature, taxonomic monographs, and individual taxon descriptions. Traits vary in scope from physiological measures of performance (e.g. photosynthetic gas exchange, water-use efficiency) to morphological attributes (e.g. leaf area, seed mass, plant height) which link to aspects of ecological variation. AusTraits contains curated and harmonised individual- and species-level measurements coupled to, where available, contextual information on site properties and experimental conditions. This article provides information on version 3.0.2 of AusTraits which contains data for 997,808 trait-by-taxon combinations. We envision AusTraits as an ongoing collaborative initiative for easily archiving and sharing trait data, which also provides a template for other national or regional initiatives globally to fill persistent gaps in trait knowledge.
    MeSH term(s) Australia ; Databases, Factual ; Phenotype ; Plant Physiological Phenomena ; Plants
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-09-30
    Publishing country England
    Document type Dataset ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2775191-0
    ISSN 2052-4463 ; 2052-4463
    ISSN (online) 2052-4463
    ISSN 2052-4463
    DOI 10.1038/s41597-021-01006-6
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article ; Online: The worldwide leaf economics spectrum.

    Wright, Ian J / Reich, Peter B / Westoby, Mark / Ackerly, David D / Baruch, Zdravko / Bongers, Frans / Cavender-Bares, Jeannine / Chapin, Terry / Cornelissen, Johannes H C / Diemer, Matthias / Flexas, Jaume / Garnier, Eric / Groom, Philip K / Gulias, Javier / Hikosaka, Kouki / Lamont, Byron B / Lee, Tali / Lee, William / Lusk, Christopher /
    Midgley, Jeremy J / Navas, Marie-Laure / Niinemets, Ulo / Oleksyn, Jacek / Osada, Noriyuki / Poorter, Hendrik / Poot, Pieter / Prior, Lynda / Pyankov, Vladimir I / Roumet, Catherine / Thomas, Sean C / Tjoelker, Mark G / Veneklaas, Erik J / Villar, Rafael

    Nature

    2004  Volume 428, Issue 6985, Page(s) 821–827

    Abstract: Bringing together leaf trait data spanning 2,548 species and 175 sites we describe, for the first time at global scale, a universal spectrum of leaf economics consisting of key chemical, structural and physiological properties. The spectrum runs from ... ...

    Abstract Bringing together leaf trait data spanning 2,548 species and 175 sites we describe, for the first time at global scale, a universal spectrum of leaf economics consisting of key chemical, structural and physiological properties. The spectrum runs from quick to slow return on investments of nutrients and dry mass in leaves, and operates largely independently of growth form, plant functional type or biome. Categories along the spectrum would, in general, describe leaf economic variation at the global scale better than plant functional types, because functional types overlap substantially in their leaf traits. Overall, modulation of leaf traits and trait relationships by climate is surprisingly modest, although some striking and significant patterns can be seen. Reliable quantification of the leaf economics spectrum and its interaction with climate will prove valuable for modelling nutrient fluxes and vegetation boundaries under changing land-use and climate.
    MeSH term(s) Biomass ; Climate ; Ecosystem ; Geography ; Models, Biological ; Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ; Photosynthesis ; Plant Leaves/anatomy & histology ; Plant Leaves/chemistry ; Plant Leaves/growth & development ; Plant Leaves/physiology ; Rain
    Language English
    Publishing date 2004-04-22
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 120714-3
    ISSN 1476-4687 ; 0028-0836
    ISSN (online) 1476-4687
    ISSN 0028-0836
    DOI 10.1038/nature02403
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Book ; Online: AusTraits

    Falster, Daniel / Gallagher, Rachael / Wenk, Elizabeth H. / Adams, Mark A. / Ahrens, Collin W. / Alfonzetti, Matthew / Angevin, Tara / Apgaua, Deborah M.G. / Arndt, Stefan / Atkin, Owen K. / Atkinson, Joe / Auld, Tony / Baker, Andrew / von Balthazar, Maria / Bean, Anthony / Blackman, Chris J. / Bloomfield, Keith / Bowman, David M.J.S. / Bragg, Jason /
    Brodribb, Timothy J. / Buckton, Genevieve / Burrows, Geoff / Caldwell, Elizabeth / Camac, James / Carpenter, Raymond / Catford, Jane A. / Cawthray, Gregory R. / Cernusak, Lucas A. / Chandler, Gregory / Chapman, Alex R. / Cheal, David / Chen, Si Chong / Choat, Brendan / Clinton, Brook / Clode, Peta L. / Coleman, Helen / Cornwell, William K. / Cosgrove, Meredith / Crisp, Michael / Cross, Erika / Crous, Kristine Y. / Cunningham, Saul / Curran, Timothy / Curtis, Ellen / DeGabriel, Jane L. / Denton, Matthew D. / Dong, Ning / Du, Pengzhen / Duan, Honglang / Duncan, David H. / Duncan, Richard P. / Duretto, Marco / Dwyer, John M. / Edwards, Cheryl / Esperon-Rodriguez, Manuel / Evans, John R. / Everingham, Susan E. / Farrell, Claire / Firn, Jennifer / Fonseca, Carlos Roberto / French, Ben J. / Frood, Doug / Funk, Jennifer L. / Geange, Sonya R. / Ghannoum, Oula / Gleason, Sean M. / Gosper, Carl R. / Gray, Emma / Groom, Philip K. / Grootemaat, Saskia / Gross, Caroline / Guerin, Greg / Guja, Lydia / Hahs, Amy K. / Harrison, Matthew Tom / Hayes, Patrick E. / Henery, Martin / Hochuli, Dieter / Howell, Jocelyn / Huang, Guomin / Hughes, Lesley / Huisman, John / Ilic, Jugoslav / Jagdish, Ashika / Jin, Daniel / Jordan, Gregory / Jurado, Enrique / Kanowski, John / Kasel, Sabine / Kellermann, Jürgen / Kenny, Belinda / Kohout, Michele / Kooyman, Robert M. / Kotowska, Martyna M. / Lai, Hao Ran / Laliberté, Etienne / Lambers, Hans / Lamont, Byron B. / Lanfear, Robert / van Langevelde, Frank / Laughlin, Daniel C. / Laugier-Kitchener, Bree Anne / Laurance, Susan / Lehmann, Caroline E.R. / Leigh, Andrea / Leishman, Michelle R. / Lenz, Tanja / Lepschi, Brendan / Lewis, James D. / Lim, Felix / Liu, Udayangani / Lord, Janice / Lusk, Christopher H. / Macinnis-Ng, Cate / McPherson, Hannah / Magallón, Susana / Manea, Anthony / López-Martinez, Andrea / Mayfield, Margaret / McCarthy, James K. / Meers, Trevor / van der Merwe, Marlien / Metcalfe, Daniel J. / Milberg, Per / Mokany, Karel / Moles, Angela T. / Moore, Ben D. / Moore, Nicholas / Morgan, John W. / Morris, William / Muir, Annette / Munroe, Samantha / Nicholson, Áine / Nicolle, Dean / Nicotra, Adrienne B. / Niinemets, Ülo / North, Tom / O’Reilly-Nugent, Andrew / O’Sullivan, Odhran S. / Oberle, Brad / Onoda, Yusuke / Ooi, Mark K.J. / Osborne, Colin P. / Paczkowska, Grazyna / Pekin, Burak / Guilherme Pereira, Caio / Pickering, Catherine / Pickup, Melinda / Pollock, Laura J. / Poot, Pieter / Powell, Jeff R. / Power, Sally A. / Prentice, Iain Colin / Prior, Lynda / Prober, Suzanne M. / Read, Jennifer / Reynolds, Victoria / Richards, Anna E. / Richardson, Ben / Roderick, Michael L. / Rosell, Julieta A. / Rossetto, Maurizio / Rye, Barbara / Rymer, Paul D. / Sams, Michael A. / Sanson, Gordon / Sauquet, Hervé / Schmidt, Susanne / Schönenberger, Jürg / Schulze, Ernst Detlef / Sendall, Kerrie / Sinclair, Steve / Smith, Benjamin / Smith, Renee / Soper, Fiona / Sparrow, Ben / Standish, Rachel J. / Staples, Timothy L. / Stephens, Ruby / Szota, Christopher / Taseski, Guy / Tasker, Elizabeth / Thomas, Freya / Tissue, David T. / Tjoelker, Mark G. / Tng, David Yue Phin / de Tombeur, Félix / Tomlinson, Kyle / Turner, Neil C. / Veneklaas, Erik J. / Venn, Susanna / Vesk, Peter / Vlasveld, Carolyn / Vorontsova, Maria S. / Warren, Charles A. / Warwick, Nigel / Weerasinghe, Lasantha K. / Wells, Jessie / Westoby, Mark / White, Matthew / Williams, Nicholas S.G. / Wills, Jarrah / Wilson, Peter G. / Yates, Colin / Zanne, Amy E. / Zemunik, Graham / Ziemińska, Kasia

    a curated plant trait database for the Australian flora

    2021  

    Abstract: INTRODUCTION AusTraits is a transformative database, containing measurements on the traits of Australia’s plant taxa, standardised from hundreds of disconnected primary sources. So far, data have been assembled from > 250 distinct sources, describing > ... ...

    Abstract INTRODUCTION AusTraits is a transformative database, containing measurements on the traits of Australia’s plant taxa, standardised from hundreds of disconnected primary sources. So far, data have been assembled from > 250 distinct sources, describing > 400 plant traits and > 26,000 taxa. To handle the harmonising of diverse data sources, we use a reproducible workflow to implement the various changes required for each source to reformat it suitable for incorporation in AusTraits. Such changes include restructuring datasets, renaming variables, changing variable units, changing taxon names. While this repository contains the harmonised data, the raw data and code used to build the resource are also available on the project’s GitHub repository, http://traitecoevo.github.io/austraits.build/. Further information on the project is available in the associated publication and at the project website austraits.org. Falster, Gallagher et al (2021) AusTraits, a curated plant trait database for the Australian flora . Scientific Data 8: 254, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-021-01006-6 CONTRIBUTORS The project is jointly led by Dr Daniel Falster (UNSW Sydney), Dr Rachael Gallagher (Western Sydney University), Dr Elizabeth Wenk (UNSW Sydney), and Dr Hervé Sauquet (Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust Sydney), with input from > 300 contributors from over > 100 institutions (see full list above). The project was initiated by Dr Rachael Gallagher and Prof Ian Wright while at Macquarie University. We are grateful to the following institutions for contributing data Australian National Botanic Garden, Brisbane Rainforest Action and Information Network, Kew Botanic Gardens, National Herbarium of NSW, Northern Territory Herbarium, Queensland Herbarium, Western Australian Herbarium, South Australian Herbarium, State Herbarium of South Australia, Tasmanian Herbarium, Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, Victoria. AusTraits has been supported by investment from the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC), ...
    Keywords biodiversity ; plant ; trait
    Subject code 005
    Publisher University of New South Wales
    Publishing country nl
    Document type Book ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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