# A dataset on forest stand structures, deadwood, and tree-related microhabitats along an urban-periurban gradient in Central Italy

**Authors:** Costanza Borghi, Soraya Versace, Elena Di Pirro, Davide Travaglini, Gherardo Chirici, Bruno Lasserre, Marco Marchetti, Giovanni D’Amico, Elia Vangi, Saverio Francini, Marco Montella, Giovanni Santopuoli, Marco Ottaviano, Francesco Parisi

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.dib.2025.111561 · Data in Brief · 2025-04-15

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a dataset of urban forest structures and microhabitats across three Italian cities, offering insights for ecological research and management.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is a georeferenced dataset capturing forest structures, deadwood, and microhabitats along an urban-periurban gradient in Italy.

## Key findings

- Three datasets were created from 180 plots across 12 urban parks in Florence, Rome, and Campobasso.
- The datasets include tree-level microhabitats, dendrometric variables, and deadwood categories like snags and stumps.
- The data can support future ecological analyses and urban forest management strategies.

## Abstract

This database provides accessible and georeferenced information on forest structure, tree-related microhabitats, and deadwood of 12 urban forests located in 12 different urban parks across three Italian cities, Florence, Rome, and Campobasso. Four urban parks – varying in size, forest type, and history – were selected following an urban-periurban gradient in each city. Inner city parks are typically ancient, with native and non-native trees planted for aesthetic and cultural purposes, and scarce semi-natural vegetation remains. Periurban parks usually host native and semi-natural vegetation and may include agricultural areas. 15 plots were placed to survey a selected urban forest located in each of the 12 urban parks, using a systematic aligned sampling scheme and then visited in the field, for a total of 180 plots. The collected data contributed to the construction of three different datasets. Two tree-level datasets present information on tree-related microhabitats and dendrometric variables including tree species, diameter at breast height, tree height, height-to-base of the live crown, tree volume, and tree basal area. The deadwood dataset presents information on five categories of deadwood, particularly snags, standing dead trees, coarse woody debris, stumps, and dead downed trees, where height, diameter, and decay status were sampled. Other research can employ these data to integrate and compare databases from different cities and forest types. Additionally, data can be linked to future analyses of urban forest fauna (e.g., beetle and bird communities) and updated to assess variability over time as well as employed in landscape analysis to guide improved management actions.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** limestone (MESH:D002119)
- **Species:** Ginkgo biloba (ginkgo, species) [taxon 3311], Populus alba (abele, species) [taxon 43335], Quercus cerris (Turkey oak, species) [taxon 39468], Acer campestre (field maple, species) [taxon 66205], Quercus suber (cork oak, species) [taxon 58331], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Arbutus unedo (strawberry tree, species) [taxon 84005], Tilia cordata (species) [taxon 172266], Crataegus monogyna (species) [taxon 140997], Osmoderma eremita (species) [taxon 314302], Helleborus foetidus (stinking hellebore, species) [taxon 46996], Quercus pubescens (species) [taxon 39471], Aesculus hippocastanum (common horse chestnut, species) [taxon 43364], Pinus pinea (parasol pine, species) [taxon 3346], Cupressus sempervirens (Mediterranean cypress, species) [taxon 13469], Pinus nigra (Austrian pine, species) [taxon 58042], Myrtus communis (species) [taxon 119949], Cerambyx cerdo (species) [taxon 1365228], Castanea sativa (European chestnut, species) [taxon 21020], Picea abies (Norway spruce, species) [taxon 3329], Emys orbicularis (European pond turtle, species) [taxon 82168], Quercus ilex (holly oak, species) [taxon 58334], Fraxinus ornus (flowering ash, species) [taxon 38874], Platanus orientalis (species) [taxon 122832], Celtis australis (species) [taxon 236733], Cedrus deodara (deodar cedar, species) [taxon 3322], Quercus frainetto (species) [taxon 225354], Cedrus libani (Lebanon cedar, species) [taxon 93692], Sequoiadendron giganteum (giant redwood, species) [taxon 99814], Cedrus atlantica (Atlantic cedar, species) [taxon 123597], Laurus nobilis (bay laurel, species) [taxon 85223], Fagus sylvatica (European beech, species) [taxon 28930]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12060504/full.md

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12060504/full.md

## References

20 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12060504/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12060504