<?xml version="1.0"?>
<eml:eml xmlns:eml="eml://ecoinformatics.org/eml-2.1.1" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" system="vmc" xsi:schemaLocation="eml://ecoinformatics.org/eml-2.1.1 eml.xsd" packageId="vmc.1387.2867.1"><eml:dataset><eml:publisher><eml:metadataProvider><eml:organizationName>Forest Ecosystem Monitoring Cooperative</eml:organizationName><eml:phone>(802) 656-0683</eml:phone><eml:electronicMailAddress>femc@uvm.edu</eml:electronicMailAddress><eml:onlineUrl>www.uvm.edu/femc</eml:onlineUrl><eml:address><eml:deliveryPoint>705 Spear Street</eml:deliveryPoint><eml:city>South Burlington</eml:city><eml:administrativeArea>Vermont</eml:administrativeArea><eml:postalCode>05403</eml:postalCode><eml:country>United States of America</eml:country></eml:address></eml:metadataProvider></eml:publisher><eml:associatedParty><eml:organizationName>Harvard University Harvard Forest</eml:organizationName><eml:role>lead</eml:role></eml:associatedParty><eml:associatedParty><eml:organizationName>Duke Forest </eml:organizationName><eml:role>partner</eml:role></eml:associatedParty><eml:researchProject><eml:title>Forest Research at Harvard Forest</eml:title><eml:abstract><eml:para>Since 1907, the Harvard Forest has served as a center for research and education in forest biology and conservation. The Forest's Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) program, established in 1988 and funded by the National Science Foundation, provides a framework for much of this activity.</eml:para></eml:abstract><eml:shortName>Forest Research at Harvard Forest</eml:shortName><eml:personnel><eml:principalInvestigator><eml:surName>Boose</eml:surName><eml:givenName>Emery</eml:givenName></eml:principalInvestigator></eml:personnel><eml:keywordSet><eml:keyword>browsing</eml:keyword><eml:keyword>forest health</eml:keyword><eml:keyword>continuous forest inventory </eml:keyword><eml:keyword>forest regeneration</eml:keyword><eml:keyword>research</eml:keyword></eml:keywordSet></eml:researchProject><eml:dataTable><eml:title>Effects of Warming on Tree Species Recruitment at Harvard Forest and Duke Forest since 2009</eml:title><eml:coverage scope="document"><eml:temporalCoverage scope="document"><eml:rangeOfDates><eml:beginDate><eml:calendarDate>2009-01-01</eml:calendarDate></eml:beginDate></eml:rangeOfDates></eml:temporalCoverage></eml:coverage><eml:description>Climate change is restructuring forests of the United States, although the details of this restructuring are currently uncertain. Rising temperatures of 2 to 8 deg C and associated changes in soil moisture will shift the competitive balance between species that compete for light and water, changing their abilities to produce seed, germinate, grow, and survive. Large scale experiments are being used to determine the effects of warming on the most sensitive stage of species distributions, i.e., recruitment, in mixed deciduous forests in southern New England and in the Piedmont region of North Carolina. Two questions organize our proposed research: (1) Might temperate tree species near the "warm" end of their range in the eastern United States decline in abundance during the coming century due to projected warming? and (2) Might trees near the "cool" end of their range in the eastern United States increase in abundance, or extend their range, during the coming 100 years because of projected warming? To explore these questions,  seedlings are exposed to air and soil warming experiments in two eastern deciduous forest sites; one at the Harvard Forest (HF) in central Massachusetts, and the other at the Duke Forest (DF) in the Piedmont region of North Carolina. The focus is on tree species common to both Harvard and Duke Forests.</eml:description><eml:purpose>To determine how climate change will restructure mixed deciduous forests in the Eastern United States at both the "warm" and "cool" ends of the tree species range. </eml:purpose><eml:shortName/><eml:physical><eml:objectName>VMC.1387.2867</eml:objectName><eml:dataFormat><eml:formatName>mySQL</eml:formatName></eml:dataFormat><eml:citation>Melillo J, Clark J, Mohan J. 2014. Effects of Warming on Tree Species Recruitment at Harvard Forest and Duke Forest since 2009. Harvard Forest Data Archive: HF199. Available at: http://harvardforest.fas.harvard.edu:8080/exist/apps/datasets/showData.html?id=hf199</eml:citation><eml:distibution><eml:online><eml:url>https://www.uvm.edu/femc/CI4/data/archive/project/Harvard_Forest_Research/dataset/effects-warming-tree-species-recruitment-harvard</eml:url></eml:online></eml:distibution></eml:physical><eml:attributeList><eml:attribute><eml:attributeName>species</eml:attributeName><eml:attributeLabel>Species field in the HF Effects of Warming datasets</eml:attributeLabel><eml:attributeDefinition>Species field in the Harvard Forest Effects of Warming on Tree Species Recruitment growth and seed origin datasets (HF199-03,199-05)</eml:attributeDefinition><eml:storageType>text</eml:storageType><eml:measurementType><eml:nominal/></eml:measurementType><eml:enumeratedDomain><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>ACBA</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #28759, Florida maple ( Acer barbatum)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>ACRU</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #28728, red maple (Acer rubrum)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>ACSA</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #28731, sugar maple (Acer saccharum)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>ACUN</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #28727, maples (Acer sp.)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>BEAL</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19481, yellow birch (Betula alleghaniensis)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>BELE</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19487, sweet birch (Betula lenta)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>BEPO</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19497, gray birch (Betula populifolia)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>BEPA</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19489, paper birch (Betula papyrifera)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>BEUN</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19478, birch (Betula sp.)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>CAGL</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19231, pignut hickory; sweet pignut (Carya glabra)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>CAOV</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19242, shagbark hickory (Carya ovata)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>FAGR</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19462, American beech (Fagus grandifolia)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>FRAM</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #32931, white ash (Fraxinus americana)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>ILVO</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #27986, yaupon (Ilex  vomitoria)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>LIST</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19027, sweetgum (Liquidambar  styraciflua)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>LITU</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #18086, yellow poplar (Liriodendron  tulipifera)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>MAGR</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #18074, laurier tulipier (Magnolia  grandiflora)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>MAVI</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #18070, laurier doux (Magnolia  virginiana)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>NYSY</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #27821, black gum, black tupelo, blackgum (Nyssa sylvatica)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>PIPA</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #18038, longleaf pine (Pinus  palustris)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>PIRE</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #183375, red pine (Pinus resinosa)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>PIST</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #183385, eastern white pine (Pinus strobus)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>PITA</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #18037, loblolly pine (Pinus  taeda)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>PIUN</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #18035, pine (Pinus sp.)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>PRSE</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #24764, black cherry (Prunus serotina)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>PRPE</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #24799, pin cherry (Prunus pensylvanica)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>QUAL</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19290, white oak (Quercus alba)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>QUFA</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19277, southern red oak (Quercus  falcata)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>QUNI</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19280, water oak (Quercus  nigra)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>QUPH</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19282, willow oak (Quercus  phellos)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>QURU</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19408, northern red oak (Quercus rubra)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>QUVE</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19447, black oak (Quercus velutina)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>QUUN</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19276, oak (Quercus sp.)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>ULAM</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #19049, American elm (Ulmus americana)</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition><eml:codeDefinition><eml:code>UNKN</eml:code><eml:definition>ITIS #823,  (Radiocystis )</eml:definition></eml:codeDefinition></eml:enumeratedDomain></eml:attribute></eml:attributeList><eml:coverage><eml:taxonomicCoverage/></eml:coverage></eml:dataTable></eml:dataset></eml:eml>
