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Scale insect abundance, impervious surface proportions, and temperature data for Acer rubrum study trees

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2016-10-01
End Date
2017-02-28

Citation

Just, Michael G.; Dale, Adam G.; Long, Lawrence C.; Frank, Steven D., 20190220, Scale insect abundance, impervious surface proportions, and temperature data for Acer rubrum study trees: , https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.jc7s27r.

Summary

In this study, we investigated how the interaction of urbanization, latitudinal warming, and scale insect abundance affected urban tree health. We predicted that trees in warmer, lower latitude cities would be in poorer health at lower levels of urbanization than trees at cooler, higher latitudes due to the interaction of urbanization, latitudinal temperature, and herbivory. To evaluate our predictions, we surveyed the abundance of scale insect herbivores on a single, common tree species (Acer rubrum) in eight US cities spanning 10° of latitude. We estimated urbanization at two extents, a local one that accounted for the direct effects on an individual tree, and a larger one that captured the surrounding urban landscape.

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Attached Files

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ScaleDistributionRedMaple_2016-2017.csv
“Scale Distribution Red Maple Data”
21.61 KB text/csv

Purpose

Data were collected to understand the relationships between latitutde, impervious surface cover, and scale insect abundance on A. rubrum.

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Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Southeast CASC

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