Cary spongy moth egg mass lab data
The Forest Response to Stress and Damage (frequently referred to as FORSTAD) and long term forest monitoring project began in 1992 to study how mixed-oak forests respond to multiple forms of environmental change. The research took place at Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in the Hudson Valley of New York. FORSTAD included several sub-projects including (1) air pollution and nutrient cycling dynamics, (2) spongy moth population dynamics, (3) small mammal dynamics and (4) vegetation dynamics. This dataset is a contribution to the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, and is part of the Long term monitoring of forest ecosystems: Cary spongy moth dynamics.
To understand the impacts of spongy moth, a non-native forest pest, every stage of the spongy moth life cycle was monitored. This included counts of spongy moths in each life stage as well as the effects of the caterpillar’s consumption of forest trees. The measurements included spongy moth egg mass density and fecundity, egg mass hatch and parasitism, late instar larval density, pupal density (at high density), canopy photos to estimate defoliation, visual estimate of defoliation, mechanisms of moth release, including white footed mouse and chipmunk removals in 1995, 1997 and 1998, larval & pupal persistence, pupal predation, natural pupation and pupal viral analysis.
The data included here are spongy moth egg mass lab data collected at each of the FORSTAD grids, Teahouse Hill and North Canoe Hill. The purpose was to determine hatch rate and parasitism of eggs. Some of the data were collected prior to the onset of the FORSTAD project.
File list:
Spongy_Moth_Egg_Mass_Lab_Metadata_public.pdf - contains complete project metadata, personnel, methodology, and definitions for data variables in all data files.
FORSTAD_Teahouse_Hill_Egg_Mass_Lab_Data_1981_2007.csv
FORSTAD_6Grids_North_Canoe_Hill_Egg_Mass_Lab_Data_1987_1998.csv
FORSTAD_Protocol_Egg_Mass_Lab_1988.pdf
FORSTAD_Protocol_Egg_Mass_Lab_1993.pdf
FORSTAD_Protocol_Egg_Mass_Lab_1999.pdf
See Related Materials for more data from the spongy moth sub-project.
Funding
US Forest Service, USDA, Cooperative Agreement 23-973
US Forest Service, USDA, Cooperative Agreement 23-072
US Forest Service, USDA, Cooperative Agreement 23-154
US Forest Service, USDA, Cooperative Agreement 23-272
NYS Department of Environmental Conservaton, Microhabitat studies on the gypsy moth: Pilot project
NYS Department of Environmental Conservaton, Improving prediction of gypsy moth outbreaks
General Reinsurance Corporation, Long-term monitoring of critical environmental problems
Direct and Indirect Effects on Community Resilience in Oak Forests
Directorate for Biological Sciences
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Find out more...Of Moths and Mice: The Influence of Dispersal Distance and Local Predation Risk on Persistence of a Sparse Prey
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COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH: Hot Today, Cold Tomorrow? Variable Persistence of Generalist Predator Hot Spots and the Dynamics of their Prey and Parasites
Directorate for Biological Sciences
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