A strength of the chaparral experimental watershed studies is the long-term
databases accumulated (usually 20 plus years). For watersheds in the
chaparral vegetation the following types of information have been collected:
Precipitation
Air temperature and humidity
Streamflow
Erosion and sedimentation
Image collection (www.rmrs.nau.edu/imagedb/)
Nutrient concentrations in precipitation and streamflow
Forage production and utilization
Wildlife trends
The studies in the chaparral and other vegetation types (For example: pinyon-juniper and ponderosa pine) in Arizona have shown that short-term
observations are often misleading and that decades may be required to
detect real changes in complex ecosystems. The long-term records in chaparral
provides:
Insight into ecosystem function
empirical data for testing models and generating hypothesis
A record of extreme or unusual events
Information that is relevant to regional, national, and global issues
Access to the long-term data sets developed through chaparral studies
is provided in the data link.