Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Ecology. 2022 Sep;103(9):e3764. doi: 10.1002/ecy.3764. Epub 2022 Jul 4.
In 1949-1951, ecologist Robert H. Whittaker sampled plant community composition at 470 sites in the Siskiyou Mountains (Oregon and California; also known as Klamath or Klamath-Siskiyou Mountains). His primary goal was to develop methods to quantify plant community variation across environmental gradients, following on his seminal work challenging communities as discrete entities. He selected the Siskiyous because of their diverse and endemic-rich flora, which he attributed to geological complexity and an ancient stable climate. He chose sites to span gradients of topography, elevation, geologic substrate, and distance from the coast. He used the frequencies of indicator species in his data to assign sampling locations to positions on the topographic gradient, nested within the elevational and substrate gradients. He originated in this study the concept of diversity partitioning, in which gamma diversity (species richness of a community) equals alpha diversity (species richness in homogeneous sites) times beta diversity (species turnover among sites along gradients). Diversity partitioning subsequently became highly influential and new developments on it continue. Whittaker published his Siskiyou work covering paleohistory, biogeography, floristics, vegetation, gradient analysis, and diversity partitioning in Ecological Monographs in 1960. Discussed in 2 pages of his 60-page monograph, diversity partitioning accounts for >95% of its current >4300 citations. In 2006, we retrieved Whittaker's Siskiyou data in hard copy from the Cornell University archives and entered them in a database. We used these data for multiple published analyses, including some based on (re)sampling the approximate locations of a subset of his sites. Because of the continued interest in diversity partitioning and in historic data sets, here we present his data, including 359 sampling locations and their descriptors and, for each sample, a list of species with their estimated percent cover (herbs and shrubs) and numbers by diameter at breast height (DBH) category (trees). Site descriptors include the approximate location (road, trail, or stream), elevation, topographic aspect, geologic substrate (serpentine, gabbro, or diorite), and dominant woody vegetation of each location. For 111 sites, including the small number chosen to represent the distance-to-coast gradient, we could not locate his data. There are no copyright restrictions and users of these data should cite this data paper in any publications that result from its use. The authors are available for consultations about and collaborations involving the data.
1949-1951 年,生态学家罗伯特·H·惠特克(Robert H. Whittaker)在塞斯基尤山脉(俄勒冈州和加利福尼亚州;也被称为克拉马斯或克拉马斯-塞斯基尤山脉)的 470 个地点采样了植物群落组成。他的主要目标是开发方法来量化环境梯度上的植物群落变化,这是他开创性工作的延续,该工作挑战了作为离散实体的群落。他选择塞斯基尤山脉是因为其多样而富含特有种的植物群,他将其归因于地质复杂性和古老而稳定的气候。他选择的地点跨越地形、海拔、地质基质和离海岸距离的梯度。他使用指示物种在数据中的频率将采样地点分配到地形梯度上的位置,嵌套在海拔和基质梯度内。他在这项研究中提出了多样性划分的概念,其中伽马多样性(群落的物种丰富度)等于阿尔法多样性(同质地点的物种丰富度)乘以贝塔多样性(沿梯度的站点之间的物种周转率)。多样性划分后来变得非常有影响力,并且对其的新发展仍在继续。惠特克于 1960 年在《生态专论》中发表了他的塞斯基尤山脉的工作,涵盖了古历史、生物地理学、植物区系学、植被、梯度分析和多样性划分。在他 60 页专论的 2 页中讨论,多样性划分占其当前超过 4300 次引用的 >95%。2006 年,我们从康奈尔大学档案馆中以硬拷贝形式检索了惠特克的塞斯基尤山脉数据,并将其输入到一个数据库中。我们使用这些数据进行了多次已发表的分析,包括一些基于(重新)采样他的部分地点的近似位置的分析。由于对多样性划分和历史数据集的持续兴趣,我们在这里提供他的数据,包括 359 个采样地点及其描述,以及每个样本的物种列表,包括估计的百分比覆盖(草本和灌木)和按胸径(DBH)类别(树木)的数量。地点描述包括每个地点的近似位置(道路、小径或溪流)、海拔、地形朝向、地质基质(蛇纹岩、辉长岩或闪长岩)和主要木本植被。对于 111 个地点,包括选择代表距海岸梯度的少量地点,我们无法找到他的数据。没有版权限制,使用这些数据的用户应在任何由此产生的出版物中引用本数据论文。作者可提供有关数据的咨询和合作。