Monitoring and Managing Ash (MaMA) Lingering Ash Survey- Powered by Anecdata.org

出現紀錄
最新版本 published by The Community Environmental Health Laboratory at MDI Biological Laboratory on 1月 1, 2023 The Community Environmental Health Laboratory at MDI Biological Laboratory

下載最新版本的 Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A) 資源,或資源詮釋資料的 EML 或 RTF 文字檔。

DwC-A資料集 下載 193 紀錄 在 English 中 (10 KB) - 更新頻率: 無計畫更新
元數據EML檔 下載 在 English 中 (18 KB)
元數據RTF文字檔 下載 在 English 中 (11 KB)

說明

MaMA Lingering Ash Search is one of three Anecdata.orgopen_in_new projects of the Ecological Research Institute’s Monitoring and Managing Ash (MaMA) program, which aims to help prevent ash extinction and mitigate EAB damage (see MonitoringAsh.org). Lingering ash, meeting strict criteria (≥4” DBH, naturally occurring, not chemically treated against EAB, and in particular canopy health classes), can only be found in areas determined to have already reached relevant ash mortality thresholds. These areas are listed at www.MonitoringAsh.org/open_in_new, where there are also instructions on how to use the AvenzaMaps app to determine whether any particular site (including your current location) is in such a search zone. However, “potential lingering ash”, meeting the same criteria as lingering ash, can be reported from any area where the mortality thresholds haven’t been met, but where most of the ash trees are dead or dying from EAB. Finding and reporting lingering ash through this Anecdata.org project will make it possible for the US Forest Service EAB Resistance Breeding Project to obtain twigs from the trees, subject to landowner permission, to help propagate EAB-resistant lines for use in ash conservation and restoration. You should inform landowners of the locations and importance of these trees so they can take steps to protect them from felling. For “potential lingering ash” reported, you will be informed when the area eventually reaches the mortality criteria that make it a lingering ash search zone and then asked to check the trees again to see if they are still healthy and, if they are, to report them as lingering ash. You should inform landowners of the locations and importance of potential lingering ash and encourage them to protect them from felling as long as they are healthy. To do this project, you need to be able to recognize trees as ash (genus Fraxinus), but are not required to be able to distinguish between ash species. However, it is particularly helpful if you can tell blue ash (Fraxinus quadrangulata) from other ash species, and also if you can recognize black ash (Fraxinus nigra). You also need to be able to assess the ash in terms of their canopy health classopen_in_new, recognize open_in_newdefinite evidence of EABopen_in_new, and estimate or measure tree diameter. None of this is particularly difficult, but make sure to train yourself before you begin collecting actual data. All data can be collected and submitted using the Anecdata.org app on a smartphone or tablet or can be submitted via the Anecdata.org website. If not using a smartphone or tablet for data collection, you can download and print a paper data sheet from www.monitoringash.org/lingering-ash-surveysopen_in_new, use a camera to take photos and a GPS unit to record location data. Any questions or comments should be sent to outreach@MonitoringAsh.org. If you are doing a systematic search for lingering or potential lingering ash trees, it is helpful to record your search track on your smartphone using AvenzaMaps or on a GPS unit; then, if you do not find any such trees, you can email your search track and a description of where you searched to outreach@MonitoringAsh.org. This will help prevent wasting repeated search effort on areas where from which these trees are absent. Terms: Dead and dying ash trees can pose hazards of serious injury from falling tree material. Participants agree to assume all risks of injury from these trees and to not hold project developers, directors, managers or funding sources liable for them. Participants should not enter private property without the landowner’s permission. Project questions and other text are copyright ERI 2017, 2018, 2019.

資料紀錄

此資源出現紀錄的資料已發佈為達爾文核心集檔案(DwC-A),其以一或多組資料表構成分享生物多樣性資料的標準格式。 核心資料表包含 193 筆紀錄。

亦存在 1 筆延伸集的資料表。延伸集中的紀錄補充核心集中紀錄的額外資訊。 每個延伸集資料表中資料筆數顯示如下。

Occurrence (核心)
193
Multimedia 
193

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版本

以下的表格只顯示可公開存取資源的已發布版本。

權利

研究者應尊重以下權利聲明。:

此資料的發布者及權利單位為 The Community Environmental Health Laboratory at MDI Biological Laboratory。 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY 4.0) License.

GBIF 註冊

此資源已向GBIF註冊,並指定以下之GBIF UUID: 74827e1b-37f9-4ec8-b53a-d1019489fa52。  The Community Environmental Health Laboratory at MDI Biological Laboratory 發佈此資源,並經由GBIF-US同意向GBIF註冊成為資料發佈者。

關鍵字

Occurrence

聯絡資訊

Radka Wildova
  • 出處
  • Project Administrator
Anecdata.org
JKtreebreeder
  • 出處
  • Project Administrator
Anecdata.org
Sarah Madronal
  • 出處
  • Project Administrator
Anecdata.org
Anecdata.org Contributors
  • 出處
  • Data Contributors
Anecdata.org
Jane Disney
  • 出處
  • 連絡人
  • Associate Professor of Environmental Health
MDI Biological Laboratory
  • 159 Old Bar Harbor Rd.
04609 Bar Harbor
ME
US
Cait Bailey
  • 出處
  • 連絡人
  • Systems Developer
MDI Biological Laboratory
  • 159 Old Bar Harbor Rd.
04609 Bar Harbor
ME
US
Ashley Taylor
  • 出處
  • 連絡人
  • Community Manager
MDI Biological Laboratory
  • 159 Old Bar Harbor Rd.
04609 Bar Harbor
ME
US
Alexis Garretson
  • 元數據提供者
  • 出處
  • 使用者
  • 連絡人
  • Community Environmental Health Laboratory Manager
MDI Biological Laboratory
  • 159 Old Bar Harbor Rd.
04609 Bar Harbor
ME
US
Anecdata.org
Community Environmental Health Laboratory
  • 連絡人
  • Community Environmental Health Laboratory
MDI Biological Laboratory
  • 159 Old Bar Harbor Rd.
04609 Bar Harbor
ME
US

地理涵蓋範圍

United States

界定座標範圍 緯度南界 經度西界 [38.734, -87.959], 緯度北界 經度東界 [42.881, -73.935]

時間涵蓋範圍

起始日期 / 結束日期 2018-09-26 / 2021-08-24

計畫資料

Anecdata is a free online citizen science platform developed by the Community Lab at the MDI Biological Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine. Anecdata is used by hundreds of individuals and organizations to gather and access citizen science observations and provides a platform to easily collect, manage, and share their citizen science data. How Anecdata works: Project managers create projects, creating datasheets that participants fill out to share their observations. Participants join projects and use the Anecdata website or mobile app to share their observations with the project. Project data is now available for anyone to view and download!

計畫名稱 Anecdata.org
辨識碼 Anecdata.org

參與計畫的人員:

Cait Bailey
  • 研究主持人
Ashley Taylor
  • 典藏經理

取樣方法

Finding, protecting, and reporting ash trees that are EAB-resistant for use in resistance breeding program.

研究範圍 In this project, you report whether you’ve found naturally occurring mature ash still healthy years after emerald ash borer (EAB) has killed almost all an area’s ash (“lingering ash”) or before then, when most of its ash are dying or dead from EAB (“potential lingering ash”). Lingering ash, through grafting and breeding, can yield highly EAB-resistant ash offering great hope for ash conservation. http://www.monitoringash.org

方法步驟描述:

  1. Searching for and reporting healthy, naturally occurring mature ash in areas severely affected by EAB.

額外的詮釋資料

替代的識別碼 74827e1b-37f9-4ec8-b53a-d1019489fa52
https://doi.org/10.15468/jeqj74
https://bison.usgs.gov/ipt/resource?r=mama-ash