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Key for West et al Leafy Spurge clonality data.csv (2.29 kB)
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West et al Leafy Spurge clonality data.csv (9.89 kB)
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Data from: High genetic diversity in the landscape suggests frequent seedling recruitment by Euphorbia virgata Waldst. & Kit. (leafy spurge) in the northern U.S.A.

dataset
posted on 2024-02-21, 16:48 authored by Natalie WestNatalie West, John F. Gaskin, Joseph Milan, Tatyana A. Rand

Site information and field-collected data from a 1-year 100-site survey of leafy spurge (Euphorbia virgata/esula) populations in the northern U.S. Data include: 1) estimates of leafy spurge density and relative prevalence of ramets versus genets; 2) the abundance and composition of Aphthona species complex biological control agents; 3) presence/absence of two additional biological control agents (Oberea erythrocephala and Hyles euphorbiae).


Resources in this dataset:

  • Resource Title: Data from: High genetic diversity in the landscape suggests frequent seedling recruitment by Euphorbia virgata (leafy spurge) in the northern U.S.A..

    File Name: West et al Leafy Spurge clonality data.csv

    Resource Description: Dataset containing site-level estimates of leafy spurge abundance, clonality, and associated biological control agent community


  • Resource Title: Key for Dataset: High genetic diversity in the landscape suggests frequent seedling recruitment by Euphorbia virgata (leafy spurge) in the northern U.S.A..

    File Name: Key for West et al Leafy Spurge clonality data.csv

    Resource Description: This provides information on the data columns included in the associated dataset.

Funding

USDA-FS: Biological Control of Invasive Forest Pest program R1-2019-05

USDA-ARS

U.S. Bureau of Land Management

History

Data contact name

West, Natalie M.

Data contact email

natalie.west@usda.gov

Publisher

Ag Data Commons

Intended use

We conducted a survey of 100 Euphorbia virgata Waldst. & Kit. (leafy spurge) populations across three U.S. states to quantify weed genetic diversity, density, and associated root-feeding biocontrol agent (Aphthona species complex) abundance. Aphthona spp. reduce survivorship and clonal recruitment, and their impacts may indirectly influence the value of seed-based recruitment to weed population increase and persistence. We intended to provide insight into: 1) the frequency of seedling recruitment among populations, which is strongly related to population genetic diversity in clonal plants such as E. virgata; and 2) the degree to which E. virgata density is related to the abundance of Aphthona spp. agents and inferred clonality within local weed populations.

Use limitations

1. Sites were chosen based on previous history of Aphthona release. Thus, the frequency of Aphthona occurrence does not reflect a probability of randomly detecting Aphthona species in the landscape. Similarly, the composition of the Aphthona species complex at each site will be strongly influenced by introduction history, and does not directly indicate colonization limitations among species. 2. This is a 1-year dataset, so Aphthona abundance should be interpreted as relative rather than absolute differences in insect numbers per site. 3. The timing of sampling was based on the phenology of the Aphthona species complex; thus, other biological control agents with different seasonal patterns are likely under-sampled.

Temporal Extent Start Date

2019-06-17

Temporal Extent End Date

2019-07-31

Theme

  • Not specified

Geographic Coverage

{"type":"FeatureCollection","features":[{"geometry":{"type":"Polygon","coordinates":[[[-116.982421875,48.950464623409],[-104.150390625,49.008150004997],[-97.119140625,49.065768634054],[-96.6796875,45.858455730517],[-103.88671875,46.041782414614],[-103.974609375,44.994911476767],[-111.005859375,45.0570313473],[-111.005859375,42.129802840362],[-116.982421875,42.129802840362],[-116.982421875,48.950464623409]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{}}]}

Geographic location - description

multiple sites in Idaho, Montana, and North Dakota, U.S.A.

ISO Topic Category

  • biota
  • environment

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

genetic variation; landscapes; species recruitment; Euphorbia virgata; Euphorbia esula; surveys; clones; Aphthona; biological control agents; Oberea erythrocephala; Hyles euphorbiae; biological control; demography; weeds; survival rate; population growth; population genetics; probability; data collection; insects; phenology; biological weed control; phytophagous insects; invasive species; population ecology; clonal variation; phytogeography; ecological invasion; United States

OMB Bureau Code

  • 005:18 - Agricultural Research Service

OMB Program Code

  • 005:040 - National Research

ARS National Program Number

  • 304

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public

Preferred dataset citation

West, Natalie M.; Gaskin, John F.; Milan, Joseph; Rand, Tatyana A. (2022). Data from: High genetic diversity in the landscape suggests frequent seedling recruitment by Euphorbia virgata Waldst. & Kit. (leafy spurge) in the northern U.S.A.. Ag Data Commons. https://doi.org/10.15482/USDA.ADC/1528351