Terrestrial Parasite Tracker indexed biotic interactions and review summary

PLEASE CONTACT AUTHORS IF YOU CONTRIBUTED AND WOULD LIKE TO BE LISTED AS A CO-AUTHOR. Terrestrial Parasite Tracker indexed biotic interactions and review summary. The Terrestrial Parasite Tracker (TPT) project began in 2019 and is funded by the National Science foundation to mobilize data from vecto...

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Hauptverfasser: Poelen, Jorrit H., Seltmann, Katja C., Campbell, Mariel, Orlofske, Sarah A., Light, Jessica E., Tucker, Erika M., Demboski, John R, McElrath, Tommy, Grinter, Christopher C, Diaz-Bastin, Rachel, Bush, Sarah E, Delapena, Robin, Cook, Joseph, Gall, Lawrence F., Whiting, Michael F, Clark, Shawn M, Cameron, Stephen L, Replogle, Charla R, Rund, Samuel S.C., Young, Daniel, Brabant, Craig, Sullivan, Kathryn, Turcatel, Maureen, Shuman Baquiran, Rebekah, Albion, Zoe, Austin, Kyhl, Rubinoff, Dan, Cognato, Anthony I., Caywood, Alyssa, Colby, Julia, Allen, Julie, Zaspel, Jennifer M., Bailey, Colin
Format: Dataset
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:PLEASE CONTACT AUTHORS IF YOU CONTRIBUTED AND WOULD LIKE TO BE LISTED AS A CO-AUTHOR. Terrestrial Parasite Tracker indexed biotic interactions and review summary. The Terrestrial Parasite Tracker (TPT) project began in 2019 and is funded by the National Science foundation to mobilize data from vector and ectoparasite collections to data aggregators (e.g., iDigBio, GBIF) to help build a comprehensive picture of arthropod host-association evolution, distributions, and the ecological interactions of disease vectors which will assist scientists, educators, land managers, and policy makers. Arthropod parasites often are important to human and wildlife health and safety as vectors of pathogens, and it is critical to digitize these specimens so that they, and their biotic interaction data, will be available to help understand and predict the spread of human and wildlife disease. This data publication contains versioned TPT associated datasets and related data products that were tracked, reviewed and indexed by Global Biotic Interactions (GloBI) and associated tools. GloBI provides open access to finding species interaction data (e.g., predator-prey, pollinator-plant, pathogen-host, parasite-host) by combining existing open datasets using open source software. If you have questions or comments about this publication, please open an issue at https://github.com/ParasiteTracker/tpt-reporting or contact the authors by email. Funding: The creation of this archive was made possible by the National Science Foundation award "Collaborative Research: Digitization TCN: Digitizing collections to trace parasite-host associations and predict the spread of vector-borne disease," Award numbers DBI:1901932 and DBI:1901926 References: Jorrit H. Poelen, James D. Simons and Chris J. Mungall. (2014). Global Biotic Interactions: An open infrastructure to share and analyze species-interaction datasets. Ecological Informatics. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoinf.2014.08.005. GloBI Data Review Report Datasets under review: - University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Insect Division. Full Database Export 2020-11-20 provided by Erika Tucker and Barry Oconner. accessed via https://github.com/EMTuckerLabUMMZ/ummzi/archive/6731357a377e9c2748fc931faa2ff3dc0ce3ea7a.zip on 2022-10-12T18:43:37.491Z - Academy of Natural Sciences Entomology Collection for the Parasite Tracker Project accessed via https://github.com/globalbioticinteractions/ansp-para/archive/5e6592ad09ec89ba7958266ad71ec9d5d21d1a44.zip o
DOI:10.5281/zenodo.3685364