{ "access": { "embargo": { "active": false, "reason": null }, "files": "public", "record": "public", "status": "open" }, "created": "2021-04-01T20:29:35.808883+00:00", "custom_fields": {}, "deletion_status": { "is_deleted": false, "status": "P" }, "files": { "count": 1, "enabled": true, "entries": { "ATLAS D8.4.pdf": { "checksum": "md5:d2182ec614228a8697c2ff412fd02e85", "ext": "pdf", "id": "fd01bf1d-4b11-42ad-9809-671dc3dc26bd", "key": "ATLAS D8.4.pdf", "metadata": null, "mimetype": "application/pdf", "size": 4392916 } }, "order": [], "total_bytes": 4392916 }, "id": "4659035", "is_draft": false, "is_published": true, "links": { "access": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/access", "access_links": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/access/links", "access_request": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/access/request", "access_users": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/access/users", "archive": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/files-archive", "archive_media": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/media-files-archive", "communities": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/communities", "communities-suggestions": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/communities-suggestions", "doi": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4659035", "draft": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/draft", "files": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/files", "latest": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/versions/latest", "latest_html": "https://zenodo.org/records/4659035/latest", "media_files": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/media-files", "parent": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659034", "parent_doi": "https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.4659034", "parent_html": "https://zenodo.org/records/4659034", "requests": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/requests", "reserve_doi": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/draft/pids/doi", "self": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035", "self_doi": "https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.4659035", "self_html": "https://zenodo.org/records/4659035", "self_iiif_manifest": "https://zenodo.org/api/iiif/record:4659035/manifest", "self_iiif_sequence": "https://zenodo.org/api/iiif/record:4659035/sequence/default", "versions": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/4659035/versions" }, "media_files": { "count": 0, "enabled": false, "entries": {}, "order": [], "total_bytes": 0 }, "metadata": { "creators": [ { "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Collart", "given_name": "T", "name": "Collart, T", "type": "personal" } }, { "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Larkin", "given_name": "K", "name": "Larkin, K", "type": "personal" } }, { "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Pesant", "given_name": "S", "name": "Pesant, S", "type": "personal" } }, { "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Gafeira", "given_name": "J", "name": "Gafeira, J", "type": "personal" } } ], "description": "
Marine data are needed for many purposes: for acquiring a better scientific understanding of the
\nmarine environment, but also, increasingly, to provide information and knowledge to support ocean
\nand coastal economic developments and underpin evidence\u2010based ocean and wider environmental
\nmanagement decision making. Data must be of sufficient quality and at the right resolution to meet
\nthe specific users’ needs. They must also be accessible in a timely manner and in appropriate formats
\n– not only in raw data but as integrated datasets, data products, etc. – for use by marine and maritime
\nprofessionals. Such expert users span scientific research, policy and industry. In addition, providing
\nengaging and user\u2010friendly interfaces and tools for wider society to explore marine data and
\ninformation e.g. through visualisations, is vital to promote a knowledge\u2010driven, ocean literate society.
\nIn addition, the blue economy, policy makers, researchers and wider society increasingly require data
\nthat are Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR) across multiple parameters, spatial
\nscales and resolutions. Many data services and initiatives already exist in Europe and there is a drive
\ntowards collaboration and interoperability of these to ensure data can be discovered through web
\nservices by human queries and through machine\u2010to\u2010machine communication.
\nThis ATLAS deliverable (D8.4) is driven by the philosophy of Open Data and Open Science, adding value
\nto the diverse datasets produced by ATLAS, making them more FAIR and so, ultimately, increasing
\ntheir long\u2010term use and impact. To this end, project partner Seascape Belgium (SBE) provided and
\ncustomised a web\u2010GIS Platform for the ATLAS project. Using an open source geospatial content
\nmanagement system – GeoNode – the ATLAS GeoNode was developed as a tool to share, visualise and
\ndownload geospatial data with the ATLAS consortium and wider stakeholders. In addition, ATLAS data
\nand data products are being ingested into the European Marine Observation Data Network
\n(EMODnet) as a long\u2010term solution to data availability, discovery and use. This report summarises the
\nwork conducted by SBE, in collaboration with University of Bremen (UniHB) and the PANGAEA2
\ninformation and data publisher for earth and environmental data, British Geological Survey (BGS) and
\nothers partners, to valorise the marine data being produced by ATLAS, namely building on existing
\nmethods and tools to add value, use and impact of marine data along the pipeline from data
\nproduction to end\u2010user. This contributes in particular to the 3rd key objective of ATLAS, to transform
\nnew data, tools and understanding and make it accessible to wider stakeholders for effective ocean
\ngovernance. To achieve this, SBE has worked together with UniHB (as data management and WP8 lead) and BGS to assess, optimise and – where possible – innovate the data flows in place. A key focus
\nhas been at the mid\u2010point of the “data pipeline”, where curated data can be ‘valorised’ through
\nmethods including data visualisation and data integration, to make them more accessible to multiand
\ninter\u2010disciplinary research communities and to wider stakeholders including policy and industry.
\nSBE administers the EMODnet Secretariat, and so has been able to facilitate direct dialogues between
\nEMODnet Data Ingestion and the seven thematic areas of EMODnet (Bathymetry, Biology, Chemistry,
\nGeology, Human Activities, Physics and Seabed Habitats) with ATLAS data providers to ensure a
\nlonger\u2010term ingestion of data into EMODnet.
\nAs a North Atlantic basin scale project with strong industry partnerships ATLAS has offered an
\nopportunity to assess data flows and pipelines from major research activities and projects via existing
\ndata publishers and assembly centres to EMODnet, and to recommend further ways to optimise these
\nin the future. This report also looks at the relevance of ATLAS data and outputs to policy and industry,
\nincluding recommendations from meetings and consultations conducted by ATLAS WP6 and WP7.
\nThese include recommendations from ATLAS D6.4 that a desire from offshore maritime industry to
\nsee greater connectivity and interoperability between marine data to increase their impact and use
\nand to streamline the process of marine data discovery, uptake and exploitation.
\nParticular focus has also been dedicated to investigate the flow of data from PANGAEA data publisher
\nto EMODnet. This has resulted in stronger collaborations between the two initiatives, leading to more
\nsystemic and operational exchanges in data flows, including a move towards automated data
\nharvesting. The project has also offered an opportunity to develop an innovative online GIS platform
\nas a community tool for sharing and integrating geospatial data. This was developed as a pilot and the
\npositive user feedback shows its potential for making data ‘come alive’, connecting it to wider
\nstakeholders and offering useful maps and products which marine and maritime professionals can use
\nfor their professional needs e.g. marine spatial planning.
\nRecommendations from this report in terms of data stewardship and data flows can be taken forward
\nby marine data initiatives and by the marine research community in the future. The advances that
\nhave been taken in ATLAS towards FAIR data are important steps towards streamlining the ingestion
\nof data into EMODnet. In EMODnet, data are discoverable through data and web services, contributing
\nto the European Union’s policy on marine knowledge, the “Marine Knowledge 2020” initiative. Here,
\nEMODnet has a key mandate to transform Europe’s fragmented data landscape into an interoperable
\nsharing framework, in addition to supporting coordinated European observation activities. This will
\nincreases the information available, and therefore the efficiency, for marine and maritime
\nprofessionals from industry, public authorities and academia to discover and use marine data, information and knowledge. This encourages innovation that reduces our present uncertainty as to
\nwhat is happening beneath the sea surface. Beyond 2020, EMODnet is working with key data
\ninitiatives to federate existing infrastructure and contribute to a Blue\u2010Cloud cyber platform3 that will
\noffer enhanced capabilities for marine research including a virtual research laboratories,
\ncomputational power and storage and the latest data discovery and interoperability to access data
\nfrom a large diversity of data initiatives and data providers.
Nucleotides data, imaging data, and environmental data (including bathymetry, physics, chemistry and biology) will be deposited in the selected data archives, i.e. European Nucleotides Archive (ENA), Euro-BioImaging (EuBI) and PANGAEA, respectively. Research articles will be published in peer-reviewed journals and other digital material (other than data) will be deposited at ZENODO.
\r\n\r\nThere are two main routes towards open access to literature and data publications:
\r\n\r\nATLAS creates a dynamic new partnership between multinational industries, SMEs, governments and academia to assess the Atlantic's deep-sea ecosystems and Marine Genetic Resources to create the integrated and adaptive planning products needed for sustainable Blue Growth.
\r\n\r\nATLAS will gather diverse new information on sensitive Atlantic ecosystems (including Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems (VMEs) and Ecologically or Biologically Sensitive Areas (EBSAs)) to produce a step-change in our understanding of their connectivity, functioning and responses to future changes in human use and ocean climate. This is possible because ATLAS takes innovative approaches to its work and interweaves its objectives by placing business, policy and socioeconomic development at the forefront with science.
\r\n\r\nATLAS creates a dynamic new partnership between multinational industries, SMEs, governments and academia to assess the Atlantic's deep-sea ecosystems and Marine Genetic Resources to create the integrated and adaptive planning products needed for sustainable Blue Growth.
\r\n\r\nATLAS will gather diverse new information on sensitive Atlantic ecosystems (including Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems (VMEs) and Ecologically or Biologically Sensitive Areas (EBSAs)) to produce a step-change in our understanding of their connectivity, functioning and responses to future changes in human use and ocean climate. This is possible because ATLAS takes innovative approaches to its work and interweaves its objectives by placing business, policy and socioeconomic development at the forefront with science.
\r\n\r\nATLAS not only uses trans-Atlantic oceanographic arrays to understand and predict future change in living marine resources, but enhances their capacity with new sensors to make measurements directly relevant to ecosystem function. The ATLAS team has the track record needed to meet the project's ambitions and has already developed a programme of 25 deep-sea cruises, with more pending final decision.
\r\n\r\nThese cruises will study a network of 12 Case Studies spanning the Atlantic, including, sponge, cold-water coral, seamount and mid-ocean ridge ecosystems. The team has an unprecedented track record in policy development at national, European and international levels. An annual ATLAS Science-Policy Panel in Brussels will take the latest results and Blue Growth opportunities identified from the project directly to policy makers.
\r\n\r\nFinally, ATLAS has a strong trans-Atlantic partnership in Canada and the USA where both government and academic partners will interact closely with ATLAS through shared cruises, staff secondments, scientific collaboration and work to inform Atlantic policy development. ATLAS has been created and designed with our north American partners to foster trans-Atlantic collaboration and the wider objectives of the Glaway Statement on Atlantic Ocean Cooperation.
", "title": "ATLAS - A Trans-Atlantic assessment and deep-water ecosystem-based spatial management plan for Europe" }, "revision_id": 0, "slug": "atlas", "updated": "2020-08-12T07:23:21.647166+00:00" }, { "access": { "member_policy": "open", "members_visibility": "restricted", "record_policy": "open", "review_policy": "closed", "visibility": "public" }, "children": { "allow": true }, "created": "2022-11-23T15:53:29.436323+00:00", "custom_fields": {}, "deletion_status": { "is_deleted": false, "status": "P" }, "id": "f0a8b890-f97a-4eb2-9eac-8b8a712d3a6c", "links": {}, "metadata": { "curation_policy": "The EU Open Research Repository serves as a repository for research outputs (data, software, posters, presentations, publications, etc) which have been funded under an EU research funding programme such as Horizon Europe, Euratom or earlier Framework Programmes.
\nThe community is managed by CERN on behalf of the European Commission.
\nZenodo’s general policies and Terms of Use apply to all content.
\nThe EU Open Research Repository accepts all digital research objects which is a research output stemming from one of EU’s research and innovation funding programmes. The funding programmes currently include:
\nHorizon Europe (including ERC, MSCA), earlier Framework Programmes (eg Horizon 2020) as well as Euratom.
\nIn line with the principle as open as possible, as closed as necessary both public and restricted content is accepted. See note on how Zenodo handles restricted content.
\nEU programme beneficiaries are eligible to submit content to the community. The community supports three types of content submissions:
\nSubmission via an EU Project Community (through user interface or programmatic APIs).
\nSubmission directly to the EU Open Research Repository.
\nAutomated harvesting from existing Zenodo content.
\nA representative of an EU project may request an EU Project Community and invite other project participants as members of the community. The project community is linked to one or more European Commission grants. All records in the project community are automatically integrated into the EU Open Research Repository immediately upon acceptance into the project community.
\nAny user may submit a record directly to the EU Open Research Repository. The submission will be moderated by Zenodo staff for compliance with the minimal required metadata requirements and its correctness.
\nRecords found among Zenodo’s existing content will on a regular basis automatically be integrated if they are found to comply with the requirements. The submissions through this method are integrated into the EU Open Research Repository with delay in a fully automated way.
\nRecords in the EU Open Research Repository are required to comply with the following minimal metadata requirements:
\nVisibility: Both public and restricted (with or without embargo and/or access request)
\nResource types: All resource types.
\nLicenses: Public and embargoed records MUST specify a license.
\nFunding information: Records MUST specify at least one grant from the European Commission.
\nCreators: Creators SHOULD be identified with a persistent identifier (e.g. ORCID, GND, …), and affiliations SHOULD be identified with a persistent identifier (e.g. ROR, ISNI, …)
\nSubjects: Records SHOULD specify one or more fields of science from the European Science Vocabulary.
\nAll submissions will undergo automated curation checks for compliance with the policy. Submissions through project communities are reviewed by the project community. Submission directly to the EU Open Research Repository is reviewed by Zenodo staff.
\nCommunity curators may at any point edit metadata of the records in the community without notice through human or automated processing. The curators may at their sole discretion remove records from the community that are deemed not to comply with the content and curation policy or which are deemed of insufficient quality.
\nThe content and curation policy is subject to change by the community owner at any time and without notice, other than through updating this page.
", "description": "Open repository for EU-funded research outputs from Horizon Europe, Euratom and earlier Framework Programmes.", "organizations": [ { "id": "00k4n6c32" } ], "page": "The EU Open Research Repository is a Zenodo-community dedicated to fostering open science and enhancing the visibility and accessibility of research outputs funded by the European Union. The community is managed by CERN on behalf of the European Commission.
\nThe mission of the repository is to support the implementation of the EU's open science policy, providing a trusted and comprehensive space for researchers to share their research outputs such as data, software, reports, presentations, posters and more. The EU Open Research Repository simplifies the process of complying with open science requirements, ensuring that research outputs from Horizon Europe, Euratom, and earlier Framework Programmes are freely accessible, thereby accelerating scientific discovery and innovation.
\nThe EU Open Research Repository serves as a complementary platform to the Open Research Europe (ORE) publishing platform. Open Research Europe focuses on providing a publishing venue for peer-reviewed articles, ensuring that research meets rigorous academic standards. The EU Open Research Repository provides a space for all the other research outputs including data sets, software, posters, and presentations that are out of scope for ORE. This holistic approach enables researchers to not only publish their findings but also share the underlying data and materials that support their work, fostering transparency and reproducibility in the scientific process.
\nCurrently in its pilot phase and set to be fully operational during autumn 2024, the EU Open Research Repository is constantly evolving. Efforts are committed to integrating cutting-edge features, including automated curation checks and FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) assistance, to further support the research community. The goal is to provide researchers with a simple goto solution for making their publicly funded research open and as FAIR as possible.
\nThe EU Open Research Repository is funded by the European Union under grant agreement no. 101122956(HORIZON-ZEN). For more information about the project see https://about.zenodo.org/projects/horizon-zen/.
", "title": "EU Open Research Repository (Pilot)", "type": { "id": "organization" }, "website": "https://research-and-innovation.ec.europa.eu" }, "revision_id": 16, "slug": "eu", "theme": { "brand": "horizon", "enabled": true, "style": { "font": { "family": "Arial, sans-serif", "size": "16px", "weight": 600 }, "mainHeaderBackgroundColor": "#FFFFFF", "primaryColor": "#004494", "primaryTextColor": "#FFFFFF", "secondaryColor": "#FFD617", "secondaryTextColor": "#000000", "tertiaryColor": "#e3eefd", "tertiaryTextColor": "#1c5694" } }, "updated": "2024-03-20T06:47:47.577483+00:00" } ], "ids": [ "5c4b9308-bf7a-4a00-8cd8-01c150268c97", "f0a8b890-f97a-4eb2-9eac-8b8a712d3a6c" ] }, "id": "4659034", "pids": { "doi": { "client": "datacite", "identifier": "10.5281/zenodo.4659034", "provider": "datacite" } } }, "pids": { "doi": { "client": "datacite", "identifier": "10.5281/zenodo.4659035", "provider": "datacite" }, "oai": { "identifier": "oai:zenodo.org:4659035", "provider": "oai" } }, "revision_id": 1, "stats": { "all_versions": { "data_volume": 171323724.0, "downloads": 39, "unique_downloads": 36, "unique_views": 73, "views": 75 }, "this_version": { "data_volume": 171323724.0, "downloads": 39, "unique_downloads": 36, "unique_views": 73, "views": 75 } }, "status": "published", "updated": "2021-04-01T20:29:37.233477+00:00", "versions": { "index": 1, "is_latest": true } }