Scientific Data | 2021

A compilation of North American tree provenance trials and relevant historical climate data for seven species

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Tree provenance trials consist of a variety of seed sources (or provenances) planted at several test sites across the range of a species. The resulting plantations are typically measured periodically to investigate provenance performance in relation to abiotic conditions, particularly climate. These trials are expensive and time consuming to establish, but are an important resource for seed transfer systems, which aim to match planting sites with well-adapted (climatically suitable) seed sources. Provenance trial measurements may be underutilized because the data are scattered across publications, conference proceedings, and university theses. Here we document an effort to collect available provenance trial measurements and associated climate data for seven eastern North American tree species ( Pinus strobus , Pinus banksiana , Picea glauca, Picea mariana, Quercus rubra, Larix laricina, Betula alleghaniensis ). The resulting datasets included a total of 773 provenances and 62 test sites, with 65 historical climate variables appended to each location. We hope this data will support forest managers in making seed transfer decisions, particularly in an era of rapid climate change. Measurement(s) height • survival • phenology Technology Type(s) digital curation Sample Characteristic - Organism Pinus strobus • Pinus banksiana • Picea glauca • Picea mariana • Quercus rubra • Larix laricina • Betula alleghaniensis Sample Characteristic - Environment woodland area Sample Characteristic - Location Canada • United States of America Machine-accessible metadata file describing the reported data: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.13136060

Volume 8
Pages None
DOI 10.1038/s41597-021-00820-2
Language English
Journal Scientific Data

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