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To request the data, go to this Google Form: [https://goo.gl/forms/WUqAgT0QrG4RDc3N2][1] David Inouye's long-term flowering phenology and abundance data from the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory is available for public use. We have a data use policy in which you must request to use the data and state how you will use it. Please read the data use policy below for the details. This policy allows us to better keep track of who has the data and how it is being used. David Inouye personally collected the data over many years as a side project. He has had NSF funding (LTREB grant) for the project 1995-1997, 2003-2008, and 2009-2019. Inouye postdocs, graduate students, research assistants, and volunteers have all helped collect the data. DATA USE POLICY David Inouye intends to have the long-term flowering phenology data available for others for research or teaching purposes with his written consent, given the conditions outlined below. Upon completing and submitting the data request form, you will be given access to the data. If you would like to use the data, these are the conditions: 1. Fill out the above Google Form, which will be sent to David Inouye and Jane Ogilvie (postdoc on the project). We will respond as soon as we can. 2. The data may only be used for the purposes you list in this form. Contact David again if (a) your intended use changes, (b) you would like to use the data for additional purposes, or (c) if you are using the data more than a year after you originally requested them. 3. Please do not share the data with others, except with specified collaborators for the questions you list in the form. Other individuals should contact David with their own request. 4. The description of how you will use the data will be added to a central document that describes who is using the data and how they are using them. This document will be made available to all people using the dataset. This is to keep track of everyone using the dataset, and to encourage openness among the group. We want to ensure that there are no potential overlaps in the types of questions being addressed and also to facilitate collaboration. We will have a public list of who has the data (but not how they are using it). 5. David has invested a lot of time and effort into collecting and summarizing these data. How he is acknowledged (i.e., co-authorship or acknowledgement within manuscripts) will be discussed and determined for individual projects, depending on his degree of involvement in the work. David and other co-PIs on the NSF grant (Brian Inouye, Nora Underwood, billy barr [weather data], and Becky Irwin [bees]) are open to collaborating on projects. [1]: https://goo.gl/forms/WUqAgT0QrG4RDc3N2 [2]: https://goo.gl/forms/WUqAgT0QrG4RDc3N2
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