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Cell biology, microbiology, ecology, biodiversity, species data, evolutionary biology
25,101 datasets
Two NOAA NODC standard formats, F132 and F144, contain data on benthic organisms and marine toxic substances collected in the Gulf of Mexico. Texas A&M University and Energy Resources Co. Inc. submitted the data with support from the Brine Disposal project. Sampling occurred from May 24, 1978, to February 26, 1979, aboard the vessels GUS III and EXCELLENCE.
Measurements of water chemistry, primary productivity, and plankton populations from three lakes at Cape Bird, Antarctica. The study includes weekly and diurnal sampling of light, temperature, oxygen, pH, chlorinity, alkalinity, conductivity, chlorophyll, and carotenoids. Data was collected by SCIOPS and last updated in 1975.
Polygon features represent overlay controls for all Victorian planning schemes, reflecting land characteristics like significant vegetation or heritage value. The dataset is attributed with scheme code, zone number, zone status, zone code, LGA name, and LGA code. It was last updated in March 2026 by the Department of Transport and Planning.
A dataset of plant shapes from the OpenML platform. No information is available on the number of rows, columns, or specific features.
Murray-Darling Basin Authority data delineates floodplain areas managed with environmental water. The dataset classifies zones as actively or passively managed for receiving 2750 gigalitres of environmental water. It includes areas potentially inundated if key constraints are overcome.
NOAA NCEI provides raster data predicting the distribution of 12 federally managed marine species in the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic. The dataset contains modeled outputs representing either probability of occurrence or relative abundance for species including shrimp, snapper, sea bass, and sharks. Predictions are based on statistical species-habitat relationships from survey data spanning 2003 to 2017.
23 peer-reviewed studies form the basis for a proposed typology addressing the temporal dimension of the environmental heterogeneity–biodiversity relationship. The framework, authored by Joseph Gent and published on figshare in 2026, identifies three key temporal domains requiring further research. The source material is a 139.9 KB DOCX file licensed under CC-BY-4.0.
Timor-Leste coastal waters contain a two-year time series of seawater temperature collected by NOAA's Coral Reef Ecosystem Program. High-accuracy subsurface recorders sampled hourly at shallow reef sites from October 2012 to October 2014. These data establish a baseline for assessing coral reef response to thermal stress and bleaching.
July 18 to August 4, 2013 survey aboard the R/V Apalachee (cruise AP-1307) collected data on demersal fish species in the DeSoto Canyon, Gulf of Mexico. The dataset includes biological measurements (species name, sex, weight, length, maturity) and fishing operation details (bait, gear, effort, sea state) from longline and trap sets at depths from 75 to 2000 meters. It was produced by NOAA NCEI as part of research into deep-sea to coast connectivity following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
NOAA and partners investigated the environmental impacts of a 21,000-gallon oil spill near Refugio State Beach in May 2015. This layer represents the overflight trackline used to search for wildlife presence within the spill area on May 21st, 2015. The data was published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Department of Commerce.
Wildlife observations were recorded in the marine environment near Refugio State Beach, California, on May 26, 2015, following a pipeline rupture. The data was collected by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and its partners to investigate the impacts of an estimated 21,000-gallon oil spill. This layer represents the observed conditions on a single day during the incident response.
BirdLife/Wirambi Landcare Tree Martin Survey recorded 33 Tree Martin nests over a five-month period from September 2024 to January 2025. Vehicle-based surveys identified that 30 nests were located in the cross bars of street power poles. The data describes nest proximity to native vegetation, urban parkland, and wetlands.
NOAA documented wildlife observations on May 24, 2015, following a 21,000-gallon pipeline rupture near Refugio State Beach. The dataset captures the immediate environmental impact of the spill into the Pacific Ocean. It was published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to support investigation and restoration efforts.
NOAA and partner agencies documented wildlife observations in the Refugio Beach Oil Spill area on May 21, 2015. The spill occurred on May 19, 2015, when a pipeline rupture released an estimated 21,000 gallons of oil into the Pacific Ocean near Santa Barbara County, California. This data layer was created to support the investigation of environmental impacts and restoration planning.
NOAA documented wildlife observations in the marine environment following a 21,000-gallon oil spill near Refugio State Beach, California, on May 19, 2015. This layer specifically captures observations from May 21, 2015, at 1400 hours during a second survey flight. The data is provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Office of Response and Restoration.
Biennial surveys from 2008-01-27 to 2012-09-13 document reef fish and benthic cover across U.S. Pacific reefs. The dataset contains metadata, site characteristics, and individual fish observations from NOAA's Pacific Reef Assessment and Monitoring Program (Pacific RAMP). It employs a stratified random sampling design across the Hawaiian and Mariana Archipelagos, American Samoa, and the Pacific Remote Island Areas.
A dataset on bird repulsion, likely containing information relevant to agricultural or urban wildlife management. It is published on the Kaggle platform. The specific data collection method, time range, and author are unknown.
Kaggle hosts a collection of images related to plant diseases and houseplant leaves. The dataset likely contains visual data for computer vision tasks in agriculture and botany. Specific details on the number of images, collection method, and time period are not provided in the available metadata.
NOAA's Alaska Fisheries Science Center conducted aerial surveys to estimate harbor porpoise abundance across three Alaska stocks. Surveys used multiple observers in bubble and belly windows to collect sightings and calculate perception bias corrections. Data collection spanned from May 1997 to July 1999, covering the Southeast Alaska, Gulf of Alaska, and Bering Sea stocks.
A 2021 study published in Frontiers in Marine Science synthesizes knowledge on Antarctic seafloor habitats and communities. The dataset, sourced from Geoscience Australia, focuses on responses to global and local drivers of change, including climate change and fishing pressures. It likely contains tabular data on vulnerable species, habitats, and management considerations for the Southern Ocean shelf.