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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-01-30
    Description: Makrozoobenthic communties were collected at multiple at different depth of wind turbines. Samples were taken by scraping the organisms from the turbines into a net (scrape samples) by scuba divers to analyse the epifaunal communities. Samples were collected in three different wind farms: DanTysk (sampled in 2018, 2019) and Sandbank (2019) in the German exclusive economic zone (EEZ) and Horns Rev (2003-2005) in the Danish EEZ. Epifaunal community was evaluated for recording successional stages of growth on the wind turbines in different depth to cover the vertical zonation along the turbines. The data are part of the Danish monitoring data on offshore wind farms and the German Standard Investigation of the Impacts of Offshore Wind Turbines on the Marine Environment (StUK 4, published by BSH 2014). Data for each campaign comprise different turbines in the wind farms sampled by scuba divers using scrape samples. Biodiversity data of species include abundance (count data) and biomass (wet mass, g) per sample. Data were collected on behalf of Vattenfall in the framework of the mandatory monitoring. Thus we would like to thank Vattenfall who kindly provided the data for scientific independent research analysis and publication.
    Keywords: Area; artificial hard substrate; benthic communities; Campaign; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Event label; Gear; German Bight; Habitat; HR_3_2003; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S1c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S1d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S2c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S2d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S3a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S3b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S3c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2003-T33/2003/03_9.2m_S3d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_0.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_0.2m_S1; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_0.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_0.2m_S1_; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_0.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_0.2m_S2; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_0.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_0.2m_S2_; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_2.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_2.2m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_2.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_2.2m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_2.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_2.2m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_2.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_2.2m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_4.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_4.2m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_4.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_4.2m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_4.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_4.2m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_4.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_4.2m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_6.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_6.2m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_6.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_6.2m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_6.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_6.2m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_6.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_6.2m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S1c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S1d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S1e; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S1f; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S2c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S2d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S2e; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S2f; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S3a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S3b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S3c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T55_8.2_3/2003-T55/2003/03_8.2m_S3d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_1.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_1.1m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_1.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_1.1m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_1.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_1.1m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_1.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_1.1m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_3.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_3.1m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_3.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_3.1m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_3.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_3.1m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_3.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_3.1m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_5.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_5.1m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_5.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_5.1m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_5.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_5.1m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_5.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_5.1m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S1c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S1d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S1e; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S1f; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S2c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S2d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S2e; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S2f; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S3a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S3b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S3c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T58_7.1_3/2003-T58/2003/03_7.1m_S3d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S1c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S1d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S2c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S2d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S3a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S3b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S3c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T91_5.5_3/2003-T91/2003/03_5.5m_S3d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S1c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S1d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S2c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S3a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S3b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S3c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T92_5.7_3/2003-T92/2003/03_5.7m_S3d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_0_3/2003-T95/2003/03_0m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_0_3/2003-T95/2003/03_0m_S1a_1_1; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_0_3/2003-T95/2003/03_0m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_0_3/2003-T95/2003/03_0m_S1b_1_1; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_0_3/2003-T95/2003/03_0m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_0_3/2003-T95/2003/03_0m_S2a_1_1; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_0_3/2003-T95/2003/03_0m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_0_3/2003-T95/2003/03_0m_S2b_1_1; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_1.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_1.3m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_1.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_1.3m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_1.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_1.3m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_1.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_1.3m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_3.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_3.3m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_3.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_3.3m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_3.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_3.3m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_3.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_3.3m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_5.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_5.3m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_5.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_5.3m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_5.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_5.3m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_5.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_5.3m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S1a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S1b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S1c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S1d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S1e; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S1f; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S2a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S2b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S2c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S2d; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S2e; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S2f; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S3a; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S3b; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S3c; HR_3_2003/HORN_T95_7.3_3/2003-T95/2003/03_7.3m_S3d; HR_3_2004; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S1a; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S1b; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S1c; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S1d; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S2a; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S2b; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S2c; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S2d; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S3a; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S3b; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S3c; HR_3_2004/HORN_T33_9.2_3/2004-T33/2004/03_9.2m_S3d; HR_3_2004/HORN_T55_0.2_3/2004-T55/2004/03_0.2m_S1a; HR_3_2004/HORN_T55_0.2_3/2004-T55/2004/03_0.2m_S1b; HR_3_2004/HORN_T55_0.2_3/2004-T55/2004/03_0.2m_S2a; HR_3_2004/HORN_T55_0.2_3/2004-T55/2004/03_0.2m_S2b; HR_3_2004/HORN_T55_2.2_3/2004-T55/2004/03_2.2m_S1a; HR_3_2004/HORN_T55_2.2_3/2004-T55/2004/03_2.2m_S1b; HR_3_2004/HORN_T55_2.2_3/2004-T55/2004/03_2.2m_S2a; HR_3_2004/HORN_T55_2.2_3/2004-T55/2004/03_2.2m_S2b; HR_3_2004/
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 133418 data points
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-03-07
    Description: The PAN-Arctic data collection of benthic BIOtas (PANABIO) contains records of benthic fauna identified at genus-level or species-level in field samples taken at point-referenced locations (stations) by means of grabs, towed gear, or seabed imaging. The data are from all major marine Arctic areas, i.e., central Arctic Ocean, Chukchi Sea, East Siberian Sea, Laptev Sea, Kara Sea, Barents Sea (incl. White Sea), Svalbard waters, Greenland Sea, Norwegian Sea, Canadian Archipelago, Beaufort Sea, and Bering Sea, as well as some adjacent sub-Arctic regions (Sea of Japan, Gulf of Okhotsk). Currently (14 December 2023), the collection includes 27 datasets with a total of 126,388 records (ranging from presence to counts, abundances or biomass) of 2,978 taxa, identified in 11,555 samples taken at 10,596 stations during 1,095 cruises between 1800 and 2014. It is also available in a PostgreSQL-based data warehouse that can be accessed and queried through an open-access frontend web service at https://critterbase.awi.de/panabio.
    Keywords: Arctic; Benthos; Biodiversity; biogeography
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 27 datasets
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  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  EPIC3World Congress of Marine Biodiversity, Montreal, Canada, 2018-05-2018-05
    Publication Date: 2018-05-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev , info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  EPIC3International Polar Conference, Rostock, Germany, 2018-03-2018-03
    Publication Date: 2018-05-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev , info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2018-06-27
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev , info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2017-04-19
    Description: Data are a valuable resource. Research institutes are important data and data-service providers both for in-house and third-party science to science interaction as well as non-science stakeholders. Data warehousing plus information systems are used to perform data-resource management, but they tend to fail, mostly because they i) are not taken up by the users, ii) inadequately reflect the needs or working practices of users, who then resort to the internet and/or desktop files, iii) don’t provide the information required, or iv) are too ambitious and become discontinued. Aim: Initiate user-driven identification/definition of components of a potential information/warehousing system (generic, task-specific, integrating, organizing, synthesising) by addressing the issues: •Do we need an information system? •Which types of information will it hold? •Which amount of development work will it take?
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Miscellaneous , notRev
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  • 7
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    Unknown
    In:  EPIC3EMBS 2015, Helgoland, Germany, 2015-09-21-2015-09-25
    Publication Date: 2015-09-28
    Description: Current bioinformatics analyses for biodiversity from molecular sequence data are discussed on the background of next generation high throughput sequencing technologies. In particular, for creating time series of community composition data from amplicon sequencing approaches, different methods and their implications are compared: OTU-clustering vs. phylotyping, tree-based taxonomic assignment vs. assignment based on only-sequence characteristics. Software and hardware requirements as well as aspects of sustainable bioinformatics support are discussed. As a concrete example of analyses support, details of the AWI pipeline QZIP are shown.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2022-09-26
    Description: Data on marine biota exist in many formats and sources, such as published literature, data repositories, and unpublished material. Due to this heterogeneity, information is difficult to find, access and combine, severely impeding its reuse for further scientific analysis and its long-term availability for future generations. To address this challenge, we present CRITTERBASE, a publicly accessible data warehouse and interactive portal that currently hosts quality-controlled and taxonomically standardized presence/absence, abundance, and biomass data for 18,644 samples and 3,664 benthic taxa (2,824 of which at species level). These samples were collected by grabs, underwater imaging or trawls in Arctic, North Sea and Antarctic regions between the years 1800 and 2014. Data were collated from literature, unpublished data, own research and online repositories. All metadata and links to primary sources are included. We envision CRITTERBASE becoming a valuable and continuously expanding tool for a wide range of usages, such as studies of spatio-temporal biodiversity patterns, impacts and risks of climate change or the evidence-based design of marine protection policies.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2022-10-04
    Description: In times of rapidly increasing multiple anthropogenic impacts on polar marine ecosystems and biodiversity, understanding, sustainable-use management and protection of these biotas is a matter of great concern. Research on marine biotas and their interactions with each other and the environment is fundamental in that regard, but available data are still diverse and scattered, as they exist in many formats and sources, such as published literature, data repositories, and unpublished material. Due to this heterogeneity, information is difficult to find, access and combine, severely impeding its reuse for further scientific analysis and its long-term availability for future generations. Scientists, decision makers, and the public require a versatile tool to compile, synthesize and manage biodiversity data in a transparent, efficient and comprehensible way and with high-level quality assurance. To address this challenge, we developed, implemented and utilize CRITTERBASE (https://critterbase.awi.de), a publicly accessible data warehouse and interactive portal that complies with the FAIR principles (Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability and Reusability of data). Its purpose is to complement long-term data storage repositories by providing powerful but easy-to-use data ingest, retrieval and exploration tools, thus facilitating the analysis of biodiversity data across multiple spatial and temporal scales and in wider contexts. Currently, it hosts quality-controlled and taxonomically standardized presence/absence, abundance, and biomass data from Arctic, North Sea and Antarctic regions, collated from the literature, unpublished data, own research and online repositories (with all metadata and links to primary sources included), for 3,173 polar benthic taxa (2,444 of which at species level) from 12,209 samples collected with grabs, underwater imaging or trawls between 1800 and 2014. CRITTERBASE is currently holding benthic biodiversity data only but because of its comprehensive and flexible data model it is suited to include information about further biotas and habitats. Therefore, we envision it becoming a valuable and continuously expanding tool for a wide range of usages, such as studies of spatio-temporal biodiversity patterns, impacts and risks of climate change or the evidence-based design of marine protection policies.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 10
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    Unknown
    In:  EPIC3CONFÉRENCES A QUÉBEC-OCÉAN, Université Laval, Québec/Canada, 2018-02-15-2018-02-15
    Publication Date: 2022-09-29
    Description: Arctic marine biota are affected profoundly and at large scales by accelerating environmental change, such as, e.g., ocean warming and sea-ice decline. Moreover, increasing human activities add further cumulative pressures. Substantial shifts in ecosystem functions and services, including biodiversity, are expected. To understand, predict, and mitigate the profound ecological consequences of such shifts, it is critical to identify and analyze the relationships between environmental drivers and ecosystem functions at a range of scales (local, regional, and pan-Arctic). We are addressing this challenge by means of a pan-Arctic knowledge system on benthic biota (PANABIO). Underpinned by international efforts to combine data and expertise, PANABIO integrates quality-controlled and geo-referenced data on benthic communities in a public data-warehouse. The system will serve as a versatile means for (a) providing ecological baseline-data to gauge ecosystem changes, (b) analysing coupling mechanisms between environmental drivers and ecosystem functions/services on regional and pan-Arctic scales, (c) developing future ecosystem scenarios in response to external forcing, and (d) creating online stakeholder-oriented visualization and analysis tools. The talk will introduce into PANABIO’s rationale, demonstrate the huge up-scaling of benthic data, report on our achievements to support data-sharing, as well as explain the approach how to use community-level distribution models to discern benthic communities in relation to multiple-factor environmental forcing, including sea-ice dynamics.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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