https://ipt.biodiversity.aq/resource?r=baso_foraminifera
SCAR Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean - foraminifera- Data
Andy
Gooday
National Oceanography Centr
Prof.
Southampton
Hampshire
SO14 3ZH
GB
02380 596353/26362
ang@noc.ac.uk
http://www.nerc.ac.uk
Nina
Rothe
National Oceanography Centr
Southampton
Samuel S.
Bowser
Wadsworth Center
Albany
New York
US
Jan
Pawlowski
3Department of Zoology and Animal Biology, University of Geneva
Geneva
CH
Anton
Van de Putte
Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences
Science Officer
Rue Vautier 29
Brussels
Brussels
1000
BE
-
antonarctica@gmail.com
http://www.naturalsciences.be
2020-01-19
eng
This dataset represents a literature study on the distribution of foraminifera in Antarctic and Sub-Antarctic waters. Dataset supplied in the framework of the SCAR Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean (BASO).
The Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean is a collection of representative maps and syntheses on the distribution of the Southern Ocean organisms, providing a general overview of the biogeography of the Southern Ocean (s.l.) and a benchmark of current biogeographic knowledge at the end of the Census of Antarctic Marine Life. This updates the well-known and useful but largely outdated biogeographic Folios of the Antarctic Map Folio Series (American Geographical Society).
Foraminifera
SCAR-MARBIN
CAML
BASO
n/a
Occurrence
GBIF Dataset Type Vocabulary: http://rs.gbif.org/vocabulary/gbif/dataset_type.xml
marine, harvested by iOBIS
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 License.
http://Atlas.biodiversity.aq
Southern Ocean and sub-Antarcitc region
-178.783
180
-22.93
-79.483
1914
2010
kingdom
Chromista
phylum
Foraminifera
class
Polythalamea
order
Allogromiida
order
Astrorhizida
order
Buliminida
order
Lagenida
order
Lituolida
order
Miliolida
order
Rotaliida
order
Textulariida
order
Trochamminida
family
Allogromida incertae sedis
family
Ammosphaeroidinidae
family
Astrorhizidae
family
Buliminidae
family
Cassidulinidae
family
Cornuspiridae
family
Epistomariidae
family
Eponididae
family
Glabratellidae
family
Glandulinidae
family
Hauerinidae
family
Lituolidae
family
Nonionidae
family
Notodendrodidae
family
Pseudoparrellidae
family
Rosalinidae
family
Rzehakinidae
family
Saccamminidae
family
Textulariidae
family
Trochamminidae
unkown
Anton
Van de Putte
Natural Environment Research Council
Prof.
European Way
Southampton
Hampshire
SO14 3ZH
GB
02380 596353/26362
antonarctica@gmail.com
http://www.nerc.ac.uk
/
Literature study
/
/
SCAR Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean
Anton
Van de Putte
The “Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean” is a legacy of the International Polar Year 2007-2009 (www.ipy.org) and of the Census of Marine Life 2000-2010 (www.coml.org), contributed by the Census of Antarctic Marine Life (www.caml.aq) and the SCAR Marine Biodiversity Information Network (www.scarmarbin.be; www.biodiversity.aq).
The “Biogeographic Atlas” is a contribution to the SCAR programmes Ant-ECO (State of the Antarctic Ecosystem) and AnT-ERA (Antarctic Thresholds- Ecosystem Resilience and Adaptation) (www.scar.org/science-themes/ecosystems).
The Census of Marine Life, was an ambitious ten-year long international project that was to examine the world’s oceans and log the occurrence and demise of marine species. Its principal objective was to assess the state of marine biodiversity at the start of the 21st century to enable predictions to be made about what species might inhabit oceans in the future. By supporting scientific coordination, rather than putting ships in the water, the Foundation leveraged over USD 650 million in total outlays. The Census ran until a final meeting in October 2010 in the Royal Society in London at which outcomes from the six ocean realms under study were presented. In total, some 2700 scientists from 80 nations participated in the Census, undertaking 540 research expeditions and producing over 2600 publications.
The ocean realm “Ice Ocean; Arctic and Antarctic” was the responsibility of two projects – Arctic Ocean Diversity (ArcOD) for the north of the globe, and the Census of Antarctic Marine Life (CAML) for the south. Both projects worked closely together and engaged in a number of joint initiatives. CAML started its activities mid-way through the Census, in 2005, following a deci- sion to hold a third International Polar Year (IPY) in 2007–2009. The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) accepted a proposal from its Life Sciences committee that CAML should go ahead as one of fifteen biological projects to be undertaken in Antarctica during the IPY; in the event CAML turned out to be the largest of them.
A key element in CAML’s success as a project was its close association with SCAR’s Marine Biodiversity Information Network (SCAR-MarBIN, www. scarmarbin.be), a data portal initiated by the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences in Brussels, implemented by the Belgian Biodiversity Platform and supported financially by the Belgian Science Policy Office. It was accepted by SCAR as the main repository for marine biodiversity data in 2005. SCAR- MarBIN became CAML’s database.
Published by:
The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, Scott Polar Research Institute, Lensfield Road, Cambridge, CB2 1ER, United Kingdom (www.scar.org).
Publication funded by:
- The Census of Antarctic Marine Life (Albert P. Sloan Foundation, New York)
- The TOTAL Foundation, Paris.
The “Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean” shared the Cosmos Prize awarded to the Census of Marine Life by the International Osaka Expo’90 Commemorative
Foundation, Tokyo, Japan.
Publication supported by:
- The Belgian Science Policy (Belspo), through the Belgian Scientific Research Programme on the Antarctic and the “biodiversity.aq” network (SCAR-MarBIN/ANTABIF)
- The Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (RBINS), Brussels, Belgium
- The British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Cambridge, United Kingdom
- The Université Pierre et Marie Curie (UPMC), Paris, France
- The Australian Antarctic Division, Hobart, Australia
- The Scientific Steering Committee of CAML, Michael Stoddart (CAML Administrator) and Victoria Wadley (CAML Project Manager)
2013-08-05T02:04:25.763+02:00
dataset
http://share.biodiversity.aq/logo_BASO_IPT.jpg
Biodiversity.aq
Literature study
NERC
other
https://ipt.biodiversity.aq/resource?id=baso_foraminifera/v3.1.xml