Plant trait and vegetation data along a 1314 m elevation gradient with fire history in Puna grasslands, Perú

Author
Halbritter, Aud Helen
Vandvik, Vigdis
Cotner, Sehoya H.
Farfan-Rios, William
Maitner, Brian S.
Michaletz, Sean T.
Menor, Imma Oliveras
Telford, Richard J.
Ccahuana, Adam
Cruz, Rudi
Sallo-Bravo, Jhonatan
Santos-Andrade, Paul Efren
Vilca-Bustamante, Lucely L.
Castorena, Matiss
Chacon-Labella, Julia
Christiansen, Casper Tai
Duran, Sandra M.
Egelkraut, Dagmar D.
Gya, Ragnhild
Haugum, Siri Vatso
Seltzer, Lorah
Silman, Miles R.
Strydom, Tanya
Spiegel, Marcus P.
Barros, Agustina
Birkeli, Kristine
Boakye, Mickey
Chiappero, Fernanda
Chmurzynski, Adam
Garen, Josef C.
Gaudard, Joseph
Gauthier, Tasha-Leigh J.
Geange, Sonya R.
Gonzales, Fiorella N.
Henn, Jonathan J.
Isaksen, Anders
Jessup, Laura H.
Johnson, Will
Kusch, Erik
Lepley, Kai
Lift, Mackenzie
Martyn, Trace E.
Mazon, Miguel Munoz
Middleton, Sara L.
Casaverde, Natalia L. Quinteros
Navarro, Jocelyn
Zepeda, Veronica
Ocampo-Zuleta, Korina
Palomino-Cardenas, Andrea Carmeli
Pastor Ploskonka, Samuel
Pierfederici, Maria Elisa
Pinelli, Veronica
Rickenback, Jess
Roos, Ruben E.
Rui, Hilde Stokland
Diaz, Eugenia Sanchez
Sanchez-Tapia, Andrea
Smith, Alyssa
Urquiaga-Flores, Erickson
von Oppen, Jonathan
Enquist, Brian J.
Publication date
2024Published in
Scientific DataVolume / Issue
11 (1)ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 2052-4463ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 2052-4463Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1038/s41597-024-02980-3
Abstract
Alpine grassland vegetation supports globally important biodiversity and ecosystems that are increasingly threatened by climate warming and other environmental changes. Trait-based approaches can support understanding of vegetation responses to global change drivers and consequences for ecosystem functioning. In six sites along a 1314 m elevational gradient in Puna grasslands in the Peruvian Andes, we collected datasets on vascular plant composition, plant functional traits, biomass, ecosystem fluxes, and climate data over three years. The data were collected in the wet and dry season and from plots with different fire histories. We selected traits associated with plant resource use, growth, and life history strategies (leaf area, leaf dry/wet mass, leaf thickness, specific leaf area, leaf dry matter content, leaf C, N, P content, C and N isotopes). The trait dataset contains 3,665 plant records from 145 taxa, 54,036 trait measurements (increasing the trait data coverage of the regional flora by 420%) covering 14 traits and 121 plant taxa (ca. 40% of which have no previous publicly available trait data) across 33 families.
Keywords
mountain biodiversity, ecosystem CO2, fluxes, forest, exchange, climate
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2823License
Full text of this result is licensed under: Creative Commons Uveďte původ 4.0 International