Published January 9, 2017 | Version v1
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Figure 17 from: De Pooter D, Appeltans W, Bailly N, Bristol S, Deneudt K, Eliezer M, Fujioka E, Giorgetti A, Goldstein P, Lewis M, Lipizer M, Mackay K, Marin M, Moncoiffé G, Nikolopoulou S, Provoost P, Rauch S, Roubicek A, Torres C, van de Putte A, Vandepitte L, Vanhoorne B, Vinci M, Wambiji N, Watts D, Klein Salas E, Hernandez F (2017) Toward a new data standard for combined marine biological and environmental datasets - expanding OBIS beyond species occurrences. Biodiversity Data Journal 5: e10989. https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.5.e10989

  • 1. Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee / Flanders Marine Institute, EurOBIS, Oostende, Belgium
  • 2. UNESCO Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission, Ocean Biogeographic Information System, UNESCO-IOC Project Office for IODE, Oostende, Belgium
  • 3. Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, MedOBIS, Gouves, Greece
  • 4. United States Geological Survey, OBIS-USA, Virginia, United States of America
  • 5. Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale (OGS), Trieste, Italy
  • 6. Marine Geospatial Ecology Laboratory, Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, OBIS-SEAMAP, Durham, NC, United States of America
  • 7. University of Colorado Museum of Natural History, OBIS-USA, Colorado, United States of America
  • 8. Centro Nacional Patagónico, ArOBIS, Puerto Madryn, Argentina
  • 9. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Southwest Pacific OBIS, Wellington, New Zealand
  • 10. British Oceanographic Data Centre, Liverpool, United Kingdom
  • 11. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, United States of America
  • 12. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, OBIS-Australia, Hobart, Australia
  • 13. Universidad Autónoma de Baja California, Mexicali, Mexico
  • 14. OD Nature, Royal Belgian Institute for Natural Sciences, Antarctic OBIS, Brussels, Belgium
  • 15. Kenya Marine and Fisheries Research Institute, Mombasa, Kenya
  • 16. Universidad Simon Bolivar, Caribbean OBIS, Caracas, Venezuela

Description

Figure 17 - A schematic presentation showing how VPR data collected together with a CTD sensor can be stored using Option 6. In the example the bold rectangles are sampling events, the dashed rectangles measurements or facts, the grey rectangles are occurrences. Software can group the occurrences from all images taken in a defined interval into a "section" event. Derived abiotic data (like average temperature) from a sensor can be linked to this interval. Additionally - if preferred - the raw CDT data can be stored as a seperate child event "CTD" of the VPR tow (as shown in this figure).

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10.3897/BDJ.5.e10989 (DOI)