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Found 10 result(s)
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The Ningaloo Atlas was created in response to the need for more comprehensive and accessible information on environmental and socio-economic data on the greater Ningaloo region. As such, the Ningaloo Atlas is a web portal to not only access and share information, but to celebrate and promote the biodiversity, heritage, value, and way of life of the greater Ningaloo region.
Country
Port Moody's Open Data Portal gives access to data, statistics, and information about your city government. By making data accessible, we aim to promote public collaboration, increase government transparency, and spark innovation. This information will be used to inform local decision-making and will help us better plan for the future. Our data portal contains a lot of information. You can search through past and current permit, licence, and business applications. Review demographic information about program registration, find information about the location of businesses within Port Moody and filter the business directory by the type of business or service.
The Database of Protein Disorder (DisProt) is a curated database that provides information about proteins that lack fixed 3D structure in their putatively native states, either in their entirety or in part. DisProt is a community resource annotating protein sequences for intrinsically disorder regions from the literature. It classifies intrinsic disorder based on experimental methods and three ontologies for molecular function, transition and binding partner.
Country
The "Flora of Bavaria" initiative with its data portal (14 million occurrence data) and Wiki representation is primarily a citizen science project. Efforts to describe and monitor the flora of Bavaria have been ongoing for 100 years. The goal of these efforts is to record all vascular plants, including newcomers, and to document threatened or former local occurrences. Being geographically largest state of Germany with a broad range of habitats, Bavaria has a special responsibility for documenting and maintaining its plant diversity . About 85% of all German vascular plant species occur in Bavaria, and in addition it has about 50 endemic taxa, only known from Bavaria (most of them occur in the Alps). The Wiki is collaboration of volunteers and local and regional Bavarian botanical societies. Everybody is welcome to contribute, especially with photos or reports of local changes in the flora. The Flora of Bavaria project is providing access to a research data repository for occurrence data powered by the Diversity Workbench database framework.
Our research focuses mainly on the past and present bio- and geodiversity and the evolution of animals and plants. The Information Technology Center of the Staatliche Naturwissenschaftliche Sammlungen Bayerns is the institutional repository for scientific data of the SNSB. Its major tasks focus on the management of bio- and geodiversity data using different kinds of information technological structures. The facility guarantees a sustainable curation, storage, archiving and provision of such data.
VertNet is a NSF-funded collaborative project that makes biodiversity data free and available on the web. VertNet is a tool designed to help people discover, capture, and publish biodiversity data. It is also the core of a collaboration between hundreds of biocollections that contribute biodiversity data and work together to improve it. VertNet is an engine for training current and future professionals to use and build upon best practices in data quality, curation, research, and data publishing. Yet, VertNet is still the aggregate of all of the information that it mobilizes. To us, VertNet is all of these things and more.
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MIDAS is a national research data repository. The aim of MIDAS is to collect, process, store and analyse research data and other relevant information in all fields of knowledge, enabling free, easy and convenient access to the data via the Internet. MIDAS provides services for registered and unregistered users: students, listeners, academics, researchers, scientists, research administrators, other actors of the research and studies ecosystem, and all individuals interested in research data. MIDAS consists of the MIDAS portal and MIDAS user account. The MIDAS portal is a public space accessible to anyone interested in discovering and viewing published research Data and their metadata, whereas MIDAS user account is available to registered users only. MIDAS is managed by Vilnius University.
OLOS is a Swiss-based data management portal tailored for researchers and institutions. Powerful yet easy to use, OLOS works with most tools and formats across all scientific disciplines to help researchers safely manage, publish and preserve their data. The solution was developed as part of a larger project focusing on Data Life Cycle Management (dlcm.ch) that aims to develop various services for research data management. Thanks to its highly modular architecture, OLOS can be adapted both to small institutions that need a "turnkey" solution and to larger ones that can rely on OLOS to complement what they have already implemented. OLOS is compatible with all formats in use in the different scientific disciplines and is based on modern technology that interconnects with researchers' environments (such as Electronic Laboratory Notebooks or Laboratory Information Management Systems).
The Arctic Data Center is the primary data and software repository for the Arctic section of NSF Polar Programs. The Center helps the research community to reproducibly preserve and discover all products of NSF-funded research in the Arctic, including data, metadata, software, documents, and provenance that links these together. The repository is open to contributions from NSF Arctic investigators, and data are released under an open license (CC-BY, CC0, depending on the choice of the contributor). All science, engineering, and education research supported by the NSF Arctic research program are included, such as Natural Sciences (Geoscience, Earth Science, Oceanography, Ecology, Atmospheric Science, Biology, etc.) and Social Sciences (Archeology, Anthropology, Social Science, etc.). Key to the initiative is the partnership between NCEAS at UC Santa Barbara, DataONE, and NOAA’s NCEI, each of which bring critical capabilities to the Center. Infrastructure from the successful NSF-sponsored DataONE federation of data repositories enables data replication to NCEI, providing both offsite and institutional diversity that are critical to long term preservation.