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   <dataset><title>Red Maple Seedling Soil Warming Experiment in Harvard Forest Lath House 2015</title><creator><organizationName>Forest Ecosystem Monitoring Cooperative</organizationName><address><deliveryPoint>705 Spear Street</deliveryPoint><city>South Burlington</city><administrativeArea>Vermont</administrativeArea><postalCode>05403</postalCode><country>United States of America</country></address><phone>(802) 656-0683</phone><electronicMailAddress>femc@uvm.edu</electronicMailAddress><onlineUrl>www.uvm.edu/femc</onlineUrl></creator><associatedParty><organizationName>Harvard University Harvard Forest</organizationName><role>lead</role></associatedParty><associatedParty><organizationName>Duke Forest </organizationName><role>partner</role></associatedParty><abstract><para>Microhabitat environmental conditions are an important filter for seedling establishment, controlling the availability of optimal recruitment sites. Understanding how tree seedlings respond to warming soil temperature is critical for predicting population recruitment in the future hardwood forests of Northeastern North America, particularly as environmental conditions and thus optimal microhabitat availabilities change. We examined the effect of 5˚C soil warming during the first growing season on germination, survival, phenology, growth, and stem and root biomass allocation in Acer rubrum (red maple) seedlings.</para></abstract><keywordSet><keyword/></keywordSet><contact><organizationName>Forest Ecosystem Monitoring Cooperative</organizationName></contact><project><title>Forest Research at Harvard Forest</title><personnel><individualName><givenName>Emery</givenName><surName>Boose</surName></individualName><role>principalInvestigator</role></personnel><abstract><para/><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.</para></abstract><studyAreaDescription/></project><dataTable><entityName>Red Maple Seedling Soil Warming Experiment in Harvard Forest Lath House 2015</entityName><entityDescription>Microhabitat environmental conditions are an important filter for seedling establishment, controlling the availability of optimal recruitment sites. Understanding how tree seedlings respond to warming soil temperature is critical for predicting population recruitment in the future hardwood forests of Northeastern North America, particularly as environmental conditions and thus optimal microhabitat availabilities change. We examined the effect of 5˚C soil warming during the first growing season on germination, survival, phenology, growth, and stem and root biomass allocation in Acer rubrum (red maple) seedlings.</entityDescription><physical><objectName>VMC.1387.2863</objectName><dataFormat><externallyDefinedFormat><formatName>mySQL</formatName></externallyDefinedFormat></dataFormat><distribution><online><url>https://www.uvm.edu/femc/CI4/data/archive/project/Harvard_Forest_Research/dataset/red-maple-seedling-soil-warming-experiment</url></online></distribution></physical><coverage scope="document"><temporalCoverage scope="document"><rangeOfDates><beginDate><calendarDate>2015-01-01</calendarDate></beginDate><endDate><calendarDate>2015-12-31</calendarDate></endDate></rangeOfDates></temporalCoverage></coverage><attributeList><attribute><attributeName>species</attributeName><attributeLabel>Species for Red Maple Seedling Soil Warming Exp at HF dataset</attributeLabel><attributeDefinition>Species for Red Maple Seedling Soil Warming Exp at HF Lath House 2015 dataset (hf291)</attributeDefinition><storageType>text</storageType><measurementScale><nominal><nonNumericDomain><enumeratedDomain><codeDefinition><code>Acer rubrum</code><definition>ITIS #28728, red maple (Acer rubrum)</definition></codeDefinition></enumeratedDomain></nonNumericDomain></nominal></measurementScale></attribute></attributeList><coverage><taxonomicCoverage/></coverage></dataTable></dataset></eml:eml>
