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Cell biology, microbiology, ecology, biodiversity, species data, evolutionary biology
24,797 datasets
Brown algae specimens collected from the Kenyan coast and taxonomically identified at the Kenya Marine and Fisheries Research Institute (KMFRI). The dataset is stored in a 5.5 KB XLS file and was last updated on April 9, -2026. It was authored by Aragaw Zemene Sendekie and is shared under a CC-BY-4.0 license.
Nine viewing angles and four spectral bands were captured by the Airborne Multi-angle Imaging Spectroradiometer (AirMISR) on June 29, 1999, during a 13-minute flight over Monterey, California. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory built the instrument for NASA, and it collected overlapping imagery from a single camera mounted on a pivoting gimbal on the NASA ER-2 aircraft. This dataset provides multi-angle spectral imagery designed to support studies of Earth's ecology and climate.
Geoscience Australia led a bathymetry survey aboard the RV Falkor from March 8 to April 8, 2020, mapping unexplored submarine canyons in the Gascoyne Marine Park. The dataset contains 64m and 16m resolution 32-bit geotiffs of the Cape Range and Cloates Canyons area, produced from processed EM302 and EM710 multibeam sonar data. This high-resolution bathymetry data is intended to underpin scientific research and marine park management.
A 6-meter resolution bathymetry dataset for the Arafura Marine Park, collected from the RV Solander between 2-15 November 2020. Geoscience Australia and the Australian Institute of Marine Science produced this data to build baseline information on benthic habitats, supporting a 10-year management plan (2018-2028). The survey covered two areas, Money Shoal and Pillar Bank, and also collected seabed samples and underwater imagery.
The northern coast of San Miguel Island, California, specifically within the Point Harris Marine Reserve, was surveyed. Data was collected using sidescan sonar to create an acoustic mosaic and a towed camera-sled for ground-truthing, with seabed characterizations logged in real-time. The dataset likely contains abiotic and biotic observations of substratum, physical structure, and benthic macrofauna and flora.
Supplementary materials support a social-ecological network (SEN) analysis of marine fish introductions into Lake Gatun, Panama, following the canal expansion. The dataset likely contains ecological and interview-derived data to model changes in fish community composition, trophic links, and impacts on fishers' livelihoods and income. Network indices reveal decreased connectivity and resilience, with variable economic susceptibility between small-scale fishers and recreational guides.
Late Quaternary sediments and landforms of Lord Howe Island, a volcanic island at the latitudinal limit of coral reef growth. The dataset, published by Geoscience Australia Data, includes information on submarine and subaerial carbonate sediments, erosional landforms, and a fringing reef. Uranium-series, amino acid racemisation, and thermoluminescence dating indicate deposits from marine oxygen isotope stage 5 and potentially older interglacial periods.
Tanintharyi Region in Myanmar is the subject of this land cover dataset. It maps four ecological forest types and other land uses based on Landsat 8 OLI imagery from March 2016. The dataset was produced by the Myanmar Information Management Unit (MIMU) and is the original version from a 2016 study.
Eight experimental transplant stations with four sediment traps each were established to study sedimentation effects on corals at Kawaihae, Hawaii. Coral colony fate was recorded as percentages across four health classes: healthy, covered with filamentous overgrowth, bleached, or dead. These data originate from a NOAA NCEI-managed study conducted during 1996-1997 field work and were published in a PhD dissertation.
Geoscience Australia and the Marine Biodiversity Hub collected high-resolution multibeam bathymetry and seafloor imagery data for Elizabeth and Middleton Reefs in the Lord Howe Marine Park. The survey, conducted from 31 January to 6 February 2020, aimed to map seabed habitats and associated fauna using AUVs, sonar, and stereo-baited video. This work was supported by the Australian Government’s National Environmental Science Program and Parks Australia.
The southern Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia, is the study area for this dataset linking physical seabed attributes to biological communities. It was created by Geoscience Australia Data and last updated in March 2026. The data likely contains measurements of sediment composition, water depth, and process-based indices to characterize benthic habitats.
Geoscience Australia collected towed video and still images of the seafloor from 2007 onwards, including 21 marine surveys between 2007 and 2013. The video system was towed 1-2 meters above the seafloor at 1-2 knots, covering distances up to 1-2 km and providing real-time footage. This imagery documents geological features, habitats, and organisms in coastal and deep-sea environments, including previously unobserved offshore sites.
M. Holmgren's dataset supports the 2026 Journal of Applied Ecology paper 'Strategies for Dry Forest Recovery: Fifteen years of Caribbean experimentation across scales'. The data originates from three restoration projects conducted on the island of Bonaire in the Dutch Caribbean. It was last updated on 2026-05-26.
Northeast US coastal data from bottle casts and bottom grabs between February 1977 and August 1981. The dataset contains physical, chemical, phytoplankton, and marine toxin measurements processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into standard formats. Data were collected by the Fish and Wildlife Service and other institutions primarily for the North East Monitoring Program.
A single clinical isolate of the rare Salmonella enterica serovar Kumasi (ST2302) from a 4-year-old child in China. The dataset includes comparative genomic, resistome, and virulence analyses against 20 publicly available S. Kumasi genomes. Shijie Peng published this 65.0 KB dataset on figshare in March 2026.
Table 7_Analysis of the TIL gene family in Brassicaceae species and functional study of BrTIL1 in cold tolerance.xlsx contains data from a comparative genomic and functional study. The dataset, authored by Zhengnan Xu and last updated on 2026-03-18, identifies 23 TIL genes across five species and validates the role of the BrTIL1 gene in cold tolerance through overexpression experiments.
A 12.2 KB Excel file contains a comparative analysis of the Temperature-induced lipocalin (TIL) gene family across five Brassicaceae species, identifying 23 TIL genes. The dataset includes results from a functional study of the Brassica rapa TIL1 (BrTIL1) gene, which was validated to enhance cold tolerance in Arabidopsis thaliana. The data was authored by Zhengnan Xu and last updated on March 18, 2026.
23 Temperature-Induced Lipocalin (TIL) genes identified across five Brassicaceae species, including Arabidopsis thaliana and four Brassica species. The dataset, authored by Zhengnan Xu and last updated in March 2026, provides a systematic analysis of gene structures, evolutionary relationships, and cis-acting elements. Functional validation shows the Brassica rapa TIL1 gene positively regulates cold tolerance, with overexpression linked to higher survival rates and antioxidant enzyme activities.
23 Temperature-induced lipocalin (TIL) genes identified across five Brassicaceae species, including Arabidopsis thaliana and four Brassica species. The dataset, created by Zhengnan Xu and last updated in March 2026, includes analysis of gene structures, evolutionary relationships, and functional validation of the BrTIL1 gene's role in cold tolerance. It provides a foundation for studying molecular mechanisms of cold stress response in these plants.
23 Temperature-induced lipocalin (TIL) genes identified across five Brassicaceae species, including Arabidopsis thaliana and four Brassica species. The dataset, created by Zhengnan Xu and last updated in March 2026, includes analyses of gene structures, evolutionary relationships, and functional validation of the BrTIL1 gene's role in cold tolerance.