Juvenile period in slow-maturing plants - South West of Western Australia.

By quantifying the length of time after fire for obligate-seeding plant species to become reproductively mature (the juvenile period), the risk of population decline under specific fire intervals can be delineated to inform local fire and conservation management.

These datasets are the spatial projections of juvenile period under recent (1990) conditions and future climate scenarios (2050 and 2090).

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Carl Gosper (2022). Juvenile period in slow-maturing plants - South West of Western Australia. [Data set]. Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions. https://doi.org/10.71726/cdmrnwdr

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Citation Gosper CR, Miller BP, Gallagher RV, Kinloch J, van Dongen R, Adams E, Barrett S, Cochrane A, Comer S, McCaw L, Miller RG, Prober SM and Yates CJ (2022) Mapping risk to plant populations from short fire intervals via relationships between maturation period and environmental productivity. Plant Ecology 223, 769-787. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11258-022-01229-6
Author Carl Gosper
Author Email Carl Gosper
Maintainer Janine Kinloch
Maintainer Email Janine Kinloch
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Published on 2022-09-08
Data last updated on 2022-09-08
Update Frequency one-off snapshot
Temporal coverage from 1990-01-01
Temporal coverage to 2090-12-31
Geospatial Coverage

Dataset extent