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      Cyberinfrastructure for Observatory and Monitoring Networks: A Case Study from the TEAM Network

      , , , , , ,
      BioScience
      University of California Press

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          Challenges and opportunities of open data in ecology.

          Ecology is a synthetic discipline benefiting from open access to data from the earth, life, and social sciences. Technological challenges exist, however, due to the dispersed and heterogeneous nature of these data. Standardization of methods and development of robust metadata can increase data access but are not sufficient. Reproducibility of analyses is also important, and executable workflows are addressing this issue by capturing data provenance. Sociological challenges, including inadequate rewards for sharing data, must also be resolved. The establishment of well-curated, federated data repositories will provide a means to preserve data while promoting attribution and acknowledgement of its use.
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            Distribution of aboveground live biomass in the Amazon basin

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              Community structure and diversity of tropical forest mammals: data from a global camera trap network.

              Terrestrial mammals are a key component of tropical forest communities as indicators of ecosystem health and providers of important ecosystem services. However, there is little quantitative information about how they change with local, regional and global threats. In this paper, the first standardized pantropical forest terrestrial mammal community study, we examine several aspects of terrestrial mammal species and community diversity (species richness, species diversity, evenness, dominance, functional diversity and community structure) at seven sites around the globe using a single standardized camera trapping methodology approach. The sites-located in Uganda, Tanzania, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Suriname, Brazil and Costa Rica-are surrounded by different landscape configurations, from continuous forests to highly fragmented forests. We obtained more than 51 000 images and detected 105 species of mammals with a total sampling effort of 12 687 camera trap days. We find that mammal communities from highly fragmented sites have lower species richness, species diversity, functional diversity and higher dominance when compared with sites in partially fragmented and continuous forest. We emphasize the importance of standardized camera trapping approaches for obtaining baselines for monitoring forest mammal communities so as to adequately understand the effect of global, regional and local threats and appropriately inform conservation actions.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                BioScience
                University of California Press
                1525-3244
                0006-3568
                July 2012
                July 01 2012
                July 2012
                July 2012
                July 01 2012
                July 2012
                : 62
                : 7
                : 667-675
                Article
                10.1525/bio.2012.62.7.9
                8b275229-e5e6-43ed-961d-df1291a6c1d3
                © 2012
                History

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