1. Cover and density data of southwestern ponderosa pine understory plants in permanent chart quadrats (2002-2020+) (2nd Edition)
- Author(s):
- Moore, Margaret M.; Jenness, Jeffrey S.; Laughlin, Daniel C.; Strahan, Robert T.; Bakker, Jonathan D.; Dowling, Helen E.; Springer, Judith D.
2. Native tree phenology data from the Ka‘ūpūlehu tropical dry forest, Hawaiʻi
- Author(s):
- Cordell, Susan; Cole, Thomas G.
3. Tree core radial growth, diameter at breast height, and height observations of a 40-year lodgepole pine provenance trial at Fraser Experimental Forest, Colorado, USA
- Author(s):
- Warnick, Katarina J.; Tinkham, Wade T.; Battaglia, Michael A.
4. Foliar metabolites from three species or breeding generations of chestnuts with soil data collected from xeric and sub-mesic sites in northern Pennsylvania, USA
- Author(s):
- Long, Stephanie; Wilson, Cornelia C.; Minocha, Rakesh; Royo, Alejandro A.; Long, Robert P.; Schlarbaum, Scott E.; Anagnostakis, Sandra L.
5. Tree ring widths and multi-objective trade-offs in western Oregon mature stands
- Author(s):
- Williams, Neil G.; Powers, Matthew D.
6. Tree biology-based tools and corresponding soil chemistry to track natural resources and processes that represent ecological conditions along the Appalachian Trail corridor
- Author(s):
- Minocha, Rakesh; Long, Stephanie
7. Effects of elevation on foliar and sapwood metabolites in sugar maple and yellow birch from two locations within the Neversink River Basin in the Catskill Mountains, NY
- Author(s):
- Minocha, Rakesh; Long, Stephanie
8. Tree monitoring data used to study the adaptability of knobcone x Monterey pine hybrids to lower-elevation, lower-quality forest sites in northwestern California
- Author(s):
- Looney, Christopher E.; Stewart, Joseph A.E.; Wood, Katherine E.A.
9. Demography of ancient western juniper (Juniperus occidentalis var. occidentalis) trees on Horse Ridge in central Oregon, USA
- Author(s):
- Loehman, Rachel A.; Heyerdahl, Emily K.; Pederson, Gregory T.; McWethy, David B.
10. Data for "Only sun-lit leaves of the uppermost canopy exceed both air temperature and photosynthetic thermal optima in a wet tropical forest"
- Author(s):
- Miller, Benjamin D.; Carter, Kelsey R.; Reed, Sasha C.; Wood, Tana E.; Cavaleri, Molly A.