Moth declines are most severe in broadleaf woodlands despite a net gain in habitat availability - data and code for analysis.

Data a zdroje

This Dataset is currently private and won't be accessible to anyone outside the organization. If you want to publish this dataset, please send an email to data.stewards@rothamsted.ac.uk

Cite this as

Retrieved: 08:54 30 Nov 2024 (UTC)
Authors
Name ORCID Affiliation

Abstract

This collection of datasets and R code contains all that is necessary to repeat the analysis in the publication "Moth declines are most severe in broadleaf woodlands despite a net gain in habitat availability" - Blumgart et al. 2022. It contains moth abundance data collected in the UK by the Rothamsted Insect Survey from 1968 to 2016, and datasets derived from this data. Also included is habitat data derived from the Land Cover Map 2015 provided by the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology and moth species traits. The R scripts can be run on the data provided to carry out the analysis which examines the effect of habitat and species traits on the long-term trends in moth abundance, richness, diversity and biomass. For a full description of each file, see the README file.

Methods

Light-traps operated by the Rothamsted Insect Survey. See methods in "Moth declines are most severe in broadleaf woodlands despite a net gain in habitat availability" - Blumgart et al. 2022

Technical Information

Many stages of preparation and processing. See R scripts provided, the README doc and methods in "Moth declines are most severe in broadleaf woodlands despite a net gain in habitat availability" - Blumgart et al. 2022

Simple Leaflet Map
Funder Information
Award Number Award Title Funder Name



Private Information
Responsible Person Alex Greenslade
Research Infrastructure Used Rothamsted Insect Survey NBRI
Data Locations Paul Database
Associated Notebooks

      
Experiment Code Type
Experiment Code
Withdrawal Reason