Data

Bird Survey Data, Far North Queensland Rainforest SuperSite, Robson Creek, 2014

TERN Australian SuperSite Network
Ford, Andrew
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=http://www.supersites.net.au/knb/metacat/supersite.188/html&rft.title=Bird Survey Data, Far North Queensland Rainforest SuperSite, Robson Creek, 2014&rft.identifier=supersite.188&rft.publisher=TERN Australian SuperSite Network&rft.description=This project is documenting the distribution of bird species and the structure of bird communities at the TERN 25 Ha Plot at Robson Creek. The advantage of using the Plot as a point of focus is that the mapping and plant community data provide a phenological and ecological context for interpreting drivers of the bird community at that site. The Robson Creek plot site was chosen because being situated at c. 700m it represents a ‘tension’ zone between different tropical forest communities that are likely to show shifts under climate change. Bird communities below 600-800m can be characterised as current lowland, warm climate communities while those above 600-800m take on species with upland distributions, e.g. golden bowerbireds. grey-headed robins and fernwrens. Robson Creek being situated at the current altitudinal boundaries of the distribution of the upland and lowland specialist species consequently represents an ideal site for monitoring the species and community responses to climate change over time. In this project we are interested in species and community responses to climate change in three contexts. First, at the species level we are interested in how individual species respond in abundance and seasonality. Second, at the community level we are interested in i) describing changes in species distribution, ii) the effects of this on community composition and structure and iii) how this varies through the year.&rft.creator=Ford, Andrew &rft.date=2015&rft.edition=3&rft.coverage=Robson Creek TERN Plot&rft.coverage=145.632308,-17.119962&rft_rights=TERN Attribution-Share Alike (TERN BY-SA) Data Licence v1.0&rft_rights=This work is licensed under TERN Attribution-Share Alike (TERN BY-SA) Data Licence v1.0. The licence lets others distribute, remix and build upon the work, even for commercial purposes, as long as they credit the original creator/s (and any other nominated parties) and licence any new creations based on the work under the same terms. All new derivative works will carry the same licence, so will also allow commercial use. http://tern.org.au/datalicence/TERN-BY-SA/1.0/&rft_subject=bird survey&rft_subject=birds&rft_subject=fauna&rft_subject=avian&rft_subject=Robson Creek&rft_subject=FNQR&rft_subject=FNQ Rainforest&rft_subject=ECOLOGY&rft_subject=BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Licence & Rights:

Other view details
Tern-by-sa

This work is licensed under TERN Attribution-Share Alike (TERN BY-SA) Data Licence v1.0. The licence lets others distribute, remix and build upon the work, even for commercial purposes, as long as they credit the original creator/s (and any other nominated parties) and licence any new creations based on the work under the same terms. All new derivative works will carry the same licence, so will also allow commercial use.
http://tern.org.au/datalicence/TERN-BY-SA/1.0/

TERN Attribution-Share Alike (TERN BY-SA) Data Licence v1.0

Access:

Other

Brief description

This project is documenting the distribution of bird species and the structure of bird communities at the TERN 25 Ha Plot at Robson Creek. The advantage of using the Plot as a point of focus is that the mapping and plant community data provide a phenological and ecological context for interpreting drivers of the bird community at that site. The Robson Creek plot site was chosen because being situated at c. 700m it represents a ‘tension’ zone between different tropical forest communities that are likely to show shifts under climate change. Bird communities below 600-800m can be characterised as current lowland, warm climate communities while those above 600-800m take on species with upland distributions, e.g. golden bowerbireds. grey-headed robins and fernwrens. Robson Creek being situated at the current altitudinal boundaries of the distribution of the upland and lowland specialist species consequently represents an ideal site for monitoring the species and community responses to climate change over time. In this project we are interested in species and community responses to climate change in three contexts. First, at the species level we are interested in how individual species respond in abundance and seasonality. Second, at the community level we are interested in i) describing changes in species distribution, ii) the effects of this on community composition and structure and iii) how this varies through the year.

Data time period: 2014 to 2014

This dataset is part of a larger collection

Click to explore relationships graph

145.63231,-17.11996

145.632308,-17.119962

text: Robson Creek TERN Plot

Subjects

User Contributed Tags    

Login to tag this record with meaningful keywords to make it easier to discover

Identifiers
  • Local : supersite.188