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ALA DOI records

A digital object identifier (DOI) is a unique alphanumeric string assigned by a registration agency (the International DOI Foundation) to identify content and provide a persistent link to its location on the Internet.

  1. Occurrence download records-2022-10-25

    Created: 2022-10-25 7:43 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  2. Occurrence download records-2022-10-25

    Created: 2022-10-25 7:41 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  3. Occurrence download records-2022-10-25

    Created: 2022-10-25 7:41 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  4. Occurrence download records-2022-10-25

    Created: 2022-10-25 7:40 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  5. Occurrence download records-2022-10-25

    Created: 2022-10-25 7:35 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  6. Occurrence download records-2022-10-25

    Created: 2022-10-25 7:35 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  7. Occurrence download records-2022-10-25

    Created: 2022-10-25 7:31 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  8. Survey download records-2022-10-24

    Created: 2022-10-24 5:20 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    This dataset contains records of bony fishes and elasmobranchs collected by Reef Life Survey (RLS) divers along 50m transects on shallow rocky and coral reefs, worldwide. Abundance information is available for all records found within quantitative survey limits (50 x 5 m swathes during a single swim either side of the transect line, each distinguished as a Block), and out-of-survey records are identified as presence-only (Method 0). Although surveys are undertaken as part of monitoring programs at particular locations (mostly in Australia), this dataset contains does not include repeat surveys of sites. SUPERSEDED BY (appears in 2 collections): * IMOS - National Reef Monitoring Network - Global reef fish abundance and biomass https://catalogue-imos.aodn.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/b273fafa-03d6-4fc2-9acf-39d8c06581e5 * IMOS - National Reef Monitoring Network - Global off-transect species observations https://catalogue-imos.aodn.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/a73907b7-3686-4dcf-8a1d-7efc4e5ffc05
  9. Occurrence download records-2022-10-24

    Created: 2022-10-24 3:12 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  10. Occurrence download GBIFrecords-2022-10-21

    Created: 2022-10-21 1:08 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  11. Survey download records-2022-10-19

    Created: 2022-10-19 10:38 PM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    Over the last decade, the Integrated Marine Observing System’s Animal Tracking Facility (IMOS ATF) has established a permanent array of acoustic receivers around Australia to detect the movements of tagged marine animals in coastal waters. Simultaneously, IMOS ATF developed a centralised national database (https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/) to encourage collaborative research across the user community and provide unprecedented opportunities to quantify individual behaviour across a broad range of taxa. Here we present the database and quality control procedures developed to collate 67 million valid detections from 1891 receiving stations. This dataset consists of detection data for 7800 tags deployed on 154 species (fish, sharks, rays, reptiles, and mammals), with distances traveled ranging from a few to thousands of kilometres. This dataset of acoustic detections constitutes a valuable resource facilitating meta-analysis of animal movement, distributions, and habitat use, and is important for relating species distribution shifts with environmental covariates. This copy of the IMOS ATF data is of the valid detections downloaded via the IMOS Animal Tracking Portal at https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/detection. This dataset has been summarized by reducing the detection records to the count of detections per animal per site per day (UTC). The DwC field organismId has been used to record the transmitter serial number. The initial deployment/release of the animal has also been added to the dataset via EMoF using an occurrenceId of the transmitter tag with a postfix of '-release'. Parameters include transmitter type, length and weight of the released animal. Downloads of the detection, deployments and receiver stations are from https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/detection accessed in 2021-01-04
  12. Occurrence download records-2022-10-19

    Created: 2022-10-19 6:23 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  13. Occurrence download records-2022-10-19

    Created: 2022-10-19 6:22 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  14. Survey download records-2022-10-19

    Created: 2022-10-19 1:45 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    Over the last decade, the Integrated Marine Observing System’s Animal Tracking Facility (IMOS ATF) has established a permanent array of acoustic receivers around Australia to detect the movements of tagged marine animals in coastal waters. Simultaneously, IMOS ATF developed a centralised national database (https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/) to encourage collaborative research across the user community and provide unprecedented opportunities to quantify individual behaviour across a broad range of taxa. Here we present the database and quality control procedures developed to collate 67 million valid detections from 1891 receiving stations. This dataset consists of detection data for 7800 tags deployed on 154 species (fish, sharks, rays, reptiles, and mammals), with distances traveled ranging from a few to thousands of kilometres. This dataset of acoustic detections constitutes a valuable resource facilitating meta-analysis of animal movement, distributions, and habitat use, and is important for relating species distribution shifts with environmental covariates. This copy of the IMOS ATF data is of the valid detections downloaded via the IMOS Animal Tracking Portal at https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/detection. This dataset has been summarized by reducing the detection records to the count of detections per animal per site per day (UTC). The DwC field organismId has been used to record the transmitter serial number. The initial deployment/release of the animal has also been added to the dataset via EMoF using an occurrenceId of the transmitter tag with a postfix of '-release'. Parameters include transmitter type, length and weight of the released animal. Downloads of the detection, deployments and receiver stations are from https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/detection accessed in 2021-01-04
  15. Survey download records-2022-10-19

    Created: 2022-10-19 1:44 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    Over the last decade, the Integrated Marine Observing System’s Animal Tracking Facility (IMOS ATF) has established a permanent array of acoustic receivers around Australia to detect the movements of tagged marine animals in coastal waters. Simultaneously, IMOS ATF developed a centralised national database (https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/) to encourage collaborative research across the user community and provide unprecedented opportunities to quantify individual behaviour across a broad range of taxa. Here we present the database and quality control procedures developed to collate 67 million valid detections from 1891 receiving stations. This dataset consists of detection data for 7800 tags deployed on 154 species (fish, sharks, rays, reptiles, and mammals), with distances traveled ranging from a few to thousands of kilometres. This dataset of acoustic detections constitutes a valuable resource facilitating meta-analysis of animal movement, distributions, and habitat use, and is important for relating species distribution shifts with environmental covariates. This copy of the IMOS ATF data is of the valid detections downloaded via the IMOS Animal Tracking Portal at https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/detection. This dataset has been summarized by reducing the detection records to the count of detections per animal per site per day (UTC). The DwC field organismId has been used to record the transmitter serial number. The initial deployment/release of the animal has also been added to the dataset via EMoF using an occurrenceId of the transmitter tag with a postfix of '-release'. Parameters include transmitter type, length and weight of the released animal. Downloads of the detection, deployments and receiver stations are from https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/detection accessed in 2021-01-04
  16. Survey download records-2022-10-19

    Created: 2022-10-19 1:32 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    Soil provides the very basis for all our lives, largely through the provision of nutrients to plants that feed both animals and humans. As such, soil is not merely a passive player as it hosts microbial communities that are primary drivers of soil ecological processes, such as nutrient and carbon cycling, as well as being intimately involved in a range of symbiotic and pathogenic co-evolutionary relationships with plants. The Biome of Australia Soil Environments (BASE) project is collecting DNA sequence information about microbial community composition across a range of different sites in order to create a reference map of Australia’s soil. The datasets are being made publicly available and can be linked with other measurements and data such as overland surveys, meteorological data and geological information to enhance the ecological knowledge of the Australian continent and contribute to land management strategies. This Bioplatforms Australia Framework Data Initiative is employing amplicon (bacterial 16S, archael 16S, fungal ITS and bacterial 18S) and shotgun metagenomics sequencing approaches. Sequencing of cell sorted samples is being investigated in order to augment the dataset with the more abundant bacterial reference genomes. The project is led by Drs Andrew Young (CSIRO), Pauline Mele (VIC Dept. Eco Dev.) and Andrew Bissett (CSIRO) in partnership with Atlas of Living Australia, Australian Antarctic Division, Australian National Data Service (ANDS), Bush Blitz, CSIRO, Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Department of Parks and Wildlife Western Australia, Department of The Environment (DOTE), Grains Research and Development Corporation, La Trobe University, Science and Industry Endowment Fund (SIEF), South Australian Research and Development Institute (SARDI), Tasmanian Land Conservancy, Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN), University of Adelaide, University of New South Wales, University of Queensland, University of Tasmania, University of Western Australia, University of Western Sydney, Victorian Department of Economic Development. For further information please visit the Bioplatforms Australia Metadata Portal: https://data.bioplatforms.com/organization/about/bpa-base Project contacts: Andrew Bissett | T: 02 6246 4820| andrew.bissett@csiro.au Anna Fitzgerald | T: 02 9850 1174 | afitzgerald@bioplatforms.com
  17. Survey download records-2022-10-19

    Created: 2022-10-19 12:40 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    Over the last decade, the Integrated Marine Observing System’s Animal Tracking Facility (IMOS ATF) has established a permanent array of acoustic receivers around Australia to detect the movements of tagged marine animals in coastal waters. Simultaneously, IMOS ATF developed a centralised national database (https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/) to encourage collaborative research across the user community and provide unprecedented opportunities to quantify individual behaviour across a broad range of taxa. Here we present the database and quality control procedures developed to collate 67 million valid detections from 1891 receiving stations. This dataset consists of detection data for 7800 tags deployed on 154 species (fish, sharks, rays, reptiles, and mammals), with distances traveled ranging from a few to thousands of kilometres. This dataset of acoustic detections constitutes a valuable resource facilitating meta-analysis of animal movement, distributions, and habitat use, and is important for relating species distribution shifts with environmental covariates. This copy of the IMOS ATF data is of the valid detections downloaded via the IMOS Animal Tracking Portal at https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/detection. This dataset has been summarized by reducing the detection records to the count of detections per animal per site per day (UTC). The DwC field organismId has been used to record the transmitter serial number. The initial deployment/release of the animal has also been added to the dataset via EMoF using an occurrenceId of the transmitter tag with a postfix of '-release'. Parameters include transmitter type, length and weight of the released animal. Downloads of the detection, deployments and receiver stations are from https://animaltracking.aodn.org.au/detection accessed in 2021-01-04
  18. Survey download records-2022-10-19

    Created: 2022-10-18 11:37 PM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    Soil provides the very basis for all our lives, largely through the provision of nutrients to plants that feed both animals and humans. As such, soil is not merely a passive player as it hosts microbial communities that are primary drivers of soil ecological processes, such as nutrient and carbon cycling, as well as being intimately involved in a range of symbiotic and pathogenic co-evolutionary relationships with plants. The Biome of Australia Soil Environments (BASE) project is collecting DNA sequence information about microbial community composition across a range of different sites in order to create a reference map of Australia’s soil. The datasets are being made publicly available and can be linked with other measurements and data such as overland surveys, meteorological data and geological information to enhance the ecological knowledge of the Australian continent and contribute to land management strategies. This Bioplatforms Australia Framework Data Initiative is employing amplicon (bacterial 16S, archael 16S, fungal ITS and bacterial 18S) and shotgun metagenomics sequencing approaches. Sequencing of cell sorted samples is being investigated in order to augment the dataset with the more abundant bacterial reference genomes. The project is led by Drs Andrew Young (CSIRO), Pauline Mele (VIC Dept. Eco Dev.) and Andrew Bissett (CSIRO) in partnership with Atlas of Living Australia, Australian Antarctic Division, Australian National Data Service (ANDS), Bush Blitz, CSIRO, Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Department of Parks and Wildlife Western Australia, Department of The Environment (DOTE), Grains Research and Development Corporation, La Trobe University, Science and Industry Endowment Fund (SIEF), South Australian Research and Development Institute (SARDI), Tasmanian Land Conservancy, Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN), University of Adelaide, University of New South Wales, University of Queensland, University of Tasmania, University of Western Australia, University of Western Sydney, Victorian Department of Economic Development. For further information please visit the Bioplatforms Australia Metadata Portal: https://data.bioplatforms.com/organization/about/bpa-base Project contacts: Andrew Bissett | T: 02 6246 4820| andrew.bissett@csiro.au Anna Fitzgerald | T: 02 9850 1174 | afitzgerald@bioplatforms.com
  19. Occurrence download records-2022-10-18

    Created: 2022-10-18 4:35 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
  20. Occurrence download records-2022-10-18

    Created: 2022-10-18 2:45 AM
    Author(s): Atlas Of Living Australia
    ALA occurrence record download
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