Mating system and early viability resistance to habitat fragmentation in a bird-pollinated eucalypt

Created 25/06/2025

Updated 25/06/2025

Data were used to demonstrate fitness impacts caused by fragmentation context. Showed extensive pollination can protect tree fitness from fragmentation. Grew open-pollinated progeny arrays of the bird-pollinated, mallee tree Eucalyptus incrassata in a randomised block design in a common garden experiment at Monarto, South Australia. Progeny arrays were collected from parental trees in either continuous forest or highly fragmented contexts. Data are therefore experimental, for hypothesis testing Data are not descriptive ecological, not plot based and not time-series. Data are not a representative sample of Eucalyptus incrassata and not representative of mallee eucalypts.

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Field Value
Title Mating system and early viability resistance to habitat fragmentation in a bird-pollinated eucalypt
Language eng
Licence Not Specified
Landing Page https://data.gov.au/data/dataset/4abe191a-c3f7-4cd3-a855-133834eb2b31
Contact Point
Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network�s Data Discovery
martin.breed@flinders.edu.au
Reference Period 01/01/2009 - 01/01/2012
Geospatial Coverage
Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors
{
  "coordinates": [
    139.13586,
    -35.15445
  ],
  "type": "Point"
}
Data Portal Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network

Data Source

This dataset was originally found on Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network "Mating system and early viability resistance to habitat fragmentation in a bird-pollinated eucalypt". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://geonetwork.tern.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/csw/dataset/mating-system-and-early-viability-resistance-to-habitat-fragmentation-in-a-bird-pollinated-euca