36 pieces of Posidonia australis and Amphibolis antarctica were transplanted by hand in March 2020 at Dubaut Point, Shark Bay. The University of Western Australia and Malgana Rangers conducted the work, with survival and shoot growth assessed in March 2022. This dataset details the monitoring results from that two-year period.
Use Cases
- Assess seagrass transplant survival rates based on the monitoring data
- Model growth patterns for Posidonia australis and Amphibolis antarctica in restoration plots
- Evaluate the effectiveness of manual transplantation methods for marine habitat restoration
Strengths
- Data covers a two-year monitoring period from 2020 to 2022
- Specifies the exact species (Posidonia australis, Amphibolis antarctica) and location (Dubaut Point, Shark Bay) studied
Limitations
- Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download
- Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment
Provenance
- Source
- Australian Ocean Data Network
- Collection Method
- Hand transplantation and subsequent field assessment by The University of Western Australia and Malgana Rangers
- Time Range
- Transplantation in March 2020, monitoring in March 2022
- Freshness
- Last updated 2026-06-04 08:06:43.942113; freshness should be verified
- Geography
- Dubaut Point, Shark Bay, Western Australia