Search datasets
Taxonomic Group
- (none) (5) Apply (none) filter
- Amphibians / Reptiles (2) Apply Amphibians / Reptiles filter
- Birds (10) Apply Birds filter
- Fishes (1) Apply Fishes filter
- Fossil (1) Apply Fossil filter
- Herbaceous plants (4) Apply Herbaceous plants filter
- (-) Remove Invertebrates filter Invertebrates
- Mammals (7) Apply Mammals filter
- Parasite / Disease (2) Apply Parasite / Disease filter
- Woody Plants (5) Apply Woody Plants filter
Biome
- Desert (2) Apply Desert filter
- Mediterranean / Chaparral (2) Apply Mediterranean / Chaparral filter
- Temperate Forest (2) Apply Temperate Forest filter
- Temperate Grassland (2) Apply Temperate Grassland filter
- Tropical Forest (2) Apply Tropical Forest filter
- Tropical Savanna (1) Apply Tropical Savanna filter
Data Type
Ecological Level
Scale (extent)
Accessiblity
- (-) Remove (none) filter (none)
- (-) Remove EcoData Retriever ready filter EcoData Retriever ready
- Publicly available (5) Apply Publicly available filter
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4
El Verde Grid Invertebrate Data is a long-term observational study of the snail community at the Luquillo LTER on Puerto Rico. Ecological Level: Community Biome: Tropical Habitat : Forest. 4 different "cover classes" on the plot, categorized by historical human use intensity (more details in Thompson et al. 2002). Location:...MORE
"The Pollinator Conservation Digital Library is a knowledge base and online community for pollinator researchers. Through this interactive site you can browse and search databases of resources and projects, find other people and organizations, as well as find news and events about pollinator related topics. We welcome your ideas and...MORE
This is a paper published in PNAS about patterns of decilne in North American bumble bees that is quite broad in scope (netted and identified 9,006 bumble bees in the west and 7,832 in the east at 382 sites across North America between 2007 and 2009 and constructed a database...MORE
Includes all Neotropical stingless bee (Hymenoptera: Apidae, Meliponini) species, with trait data collected from the literature and unpublished data. Traits include worker body size, colony size, nest description, foraging strategy, aggressiveness, flight range, etc. All data entered have been matched to current species names, following the Moure catalog ( http://moure.cria.org.br/index...MORE