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Cell biology, microbiology, ecology, biodiversity, species data, evolutionary biology
24,566 datasets
Darwin and Bynoe Harbour regions are the focus of a four-year collaborative habitat mapping program from 2014 to 2018. The program was undertaken by Geoscience Australia, the Australian Institute of Marine Science, and the Northern Territory Government Department of Environment and Natural Resources. It aims to collate baseline information and develop thematic habitat maps to support future marine resource management decisions.
Saudi Arabia is the location for this case report on a highly sensitized pediatric kidney transplant recipient. The dataset comprises supplementary material detailing a successful desensitization protocol using intravenous immunoglobulin and rituximab for a 16-year-old male with a cPRA >99%. It includes clinical outcomes such as creatinine levels and estimated GFR at 72 hours and 12 months post-transplant.
A 2019-updated map produced for the Australian Fisheries Management Authority to assist enforcement of Australia's maritime boundaries. This Indonesian-translated version explains fishing zones in the Timor and Arafura Seas to Indonesian fishermen using icons. The map was updated to reflect the 2018 Australia/Timor-Leste Maritime Boundaries Treaty.
The Australian Ocean Data Network provides a dataset of 4,483 individual fish, sharks, rays, and sea snakes from 140 species, observed using 53 baited remote underwater video stations (BRUVS) near Cairns and Cardwell in December 2006. It includes 648 images, with approximately 3,500 of the best images stored in a reference library. Data recorded includes habitat classification, species identity with CAAB codes, arrival times, behavior, maturity, and relative abundance metrics like MaxN.
NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer collected oceanographic data in the South Pacific Ocean from January 18 to February 10, 2017. The expedition focused on mapping within the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument and the Phoenix Islands Protected Area. Data was gathered using deep-water mapping systems including multibeam sonar, fisheries sonars, and sub-bottom profilers.
5,748 individuals from 212 species of fishes, sharks, rays, and sea snakes were observed at Karmt Shoals using 90 baited remote underwater video stations (BRUVS) between January 19 and February 4, 2004. The dataset, managed by the Australian Ocean Data Network, includes 1,074 images and records habitat classification, species identity with CAAB codes, arrival times, behavior, maturity, and relative abundance (MaxN). A custom Microsoft Access interface was developed by AIMS staff for reading and analyzing the BRUVS tapes.
November 2022 saw an update adding an area south of Grande Prairie to this geospatial dataset. It delineates mountain goat and bighorn sheep ranges in Alberta, Canada, derived from telemetry observations, aerial surveys, and habitat suitability indexes. The Government of Alberta created and maintains this data for land use and wildlife conservation planning.
Central California's Devil's Slide Rock seabird colony is documented in this digital collection of scanned aerial photographs from 1996. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge Complex created the images to establish a baseline for the Common Murre Restoration Project. This dataset contains archival TIFF and web-access JPEG images from a NOAA Climate Database Modernization Program task.
1083 individual fish, sharks, rays, and sea snakes from 86 species were observed using 15 baited remote underwater video stations (BRUVS) near Townsville, Australia. The dataset includes 239 images and records habitat classification, species identity with CAAB codes, arrival times, behavior, maturity, and relative abundance measures like MaxN. Data was collected by AIMS staff from December 11 to 15, 2001, and a custom Microsoft Access interface was developed for analysis.
Inshore Shoals near Townsville, Australia, were surveyed on 2006-11-07 using baited remote underwater video stations (BRUVS). The dataset comprises 429 individual observations of 45 species, including fishes, sharks, rays, and sea snakes, with 67 associated images. Data recorded includes habitat classification, species identity with CAAB codes, arrival times, behavior, maturity, and relative abundance metrics like MaxN.
From October 28 to 30, 2006, this dataset records observations from 5 baited remote underwater video stations deployed around inshore shoals near Townsville. It comprises 242 individual fish, sharks, rays, and sea snakes from 43 species, with 64 images captured during the survey. The data was managed by the Australian Ocean Data Network using a custom Microsoft Access interface developed by AIMS staff.
18,650 individual fish, sharks, rays, and sea snakes from 298 species were observed using 313 baited remote underwater video stations (BRUVS) in the Great Barrier Reef Southern Shoals from October to November 2009. The dataset includes 3,983 images and records habitat classification, species identity with CAAB codes, arrival times, behavior, maturity, and relative abundance (MaxN). Data was collected and analyzed by AIMS staff using a custom Microsoft Access interface and is hosted by the Australian Ocean Data Network.
Near-shore shallow water Conductivity-Temperature-Depth surveys provide vertical profiles to a maximum depth of 30 meters. These surveys, part of the National Coral Reef Monitoring Program, characterize the physical and chemical properties influencing coral reef resources in the Pacific Remote Island Areas. Data collection uses Sea-Bird Electronics SBE19-plus and SBE43 sensors with specified accuracy levels.
2108 individual fish, sharks, rays, and sea snakes from 100 species were recorded using 72 baited underwater video stations around Darwin Harbour wrecks in August 2003. The dataset includes 409 images and records habitat classification, species identity with CAAB codes, arrival times, behavior, maturity, and relative abundance metrics like MaxN. It was collected by the Australian Ocean Data Network using the BRUVS(TM) method.
A survey of the Solitary Islands Key Ecological Feature off New South Wales, Australia, was conducted from August 7 to 16, 2012 by Geoscience Australia and the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage. The survey collected forward-facing mono and stereo video, downward-facing still images, and GPS/USBL positional data to characterize benthic habitats and compare visual survey methods. Data is organized by transect and includes files from GoPro cameras, a Nikon D700, and positional logs.
December 2010 funding initiated the Darwin Harbour Habitat Mapping Program, managed by the Department of Land Resource Management. The program involved collaboration with Geoscience Australia, the Australian Institute of Marine Science, and the Darwin Port Corporation to acquire multibeam data. The output includes video flythroughs presenting seabed bathymetry compilations for Darwin Harbour in the Northern Territory.
Supplementary Material 1 is an 11.6 KB XLSX file published on figshare by Leticia Masiero Desajacomo. The data likely contains genomic sequence alignments or annotations related to the As51 satellite DNA and 45S ribosomal DNA in Characiformes fish. It was last updated on 2026-05-13 and is shared under a CC-BY-4.0 license.
The Gippsland Marine Environmental Monitoring (GMEM) project final report details a multi-component study on the effects of seismic surveys on marine life. The study was developed in response to fisheries industry concerns following the GA352 seismic survey in the Gippsland Basin in April 2015. It includes components such as sound modelling, scallop assessment via AUV and dredging, fish behavior tracking, and fisheries catch analysis.
A 2019 map and coordinate list updated to reflect the 2018 Australia/Timor-Leste Maritime Boundaries Treaty. It was produced for the Australian Fisheries Management Authority to assist with enforcement of Australia's maritime boundaries. The data is hosted by the Australian Ocean Data Network and was originally produced in Indonesian before being translated to English.
7777 individuals from 184 species of fishes, sharks, rays, and sea snakes were observed using 126 baited remote underwater video stations (BRUVS) in the South Scott Reef Lagoon during a survey from January 3 to 29, 2008. The dataset includes 503 images from the survey and records habitat classification, species identity with CAAB codes, arrival times, behavior, maturity, and relative abundance metrics like MaxN. The data is managed by the Australian Ocean Data Network and was last updated on March 22, 2026.