Search for Species Search for CITES Documents You can also search for this author in You can also search for this author in You can also search for this author in The hydrological sub-drainage units within the Amazon Basin were delineated using the HydroBASINS framework, a subset of the HydroSHEDS databaseThe main sources of the database are online biodiversity databases (56% of the occurrences), followed by locally hosted data from the scientific partners (Peru and Colombia), museums and universities from Brazil, Bolivia and Ecuador (38%), literature data (5% of the records) and data obtained during sampling campaigns by partners from Colombia, Peru and Brazil (1%).
You can also search for this author in An important amount of data was extracted from the most used and frequently updated online biodiversity databases (see details in Table All occurrences not identified to species level were discarded (A species status (‘native’ or ‘exotic’) and an occurrence species status (‘valid’, ‘to be verified’ or ‘marine’) were assigned to each species.

When the presence of a taxon was inconsistent with its actual known distribution, the species was classified as ‘to be verified’.

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v2.10. and T.O. You can also search for this author in You can also search for this author in Internet Explorer). The corresponding table has nine columns (see Table The second sub-set (‘CompleteDatabase’) provides the geographic coordinates for the georeferenced sampling sites and the information source of each record.
The database contains associations based on butterflies, mammal, reptile and amphibian species listed in European Atlases, all species and habitats considered for reporting under Article 17 of the Habitats Directive and all bird and C.J.

The database is currently being used to analyse fish diversity patterns at the Amazon Basin scaleSpecies occurrences are delivered here at two spatial grains, sampling sites (with precise geographic coordinates) and sub-drainage (144 units) grains. Ledeganckstraat 35, B-9000, Gent, BelgiumUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, Departamento de Ciências do Mar, Campus Baixada Santista (UNIFESP). GBIF has now grown into the largest biodiversity database in the world with records of hundreds of millions of occurrences of over 1.7 million species, ranging from bacteria to blue whales. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. You can also search for this author in Lundberg, J. G., Kottelat, M., Smith, G. R., Stiassny, M. L. J. You can also search for this author in You can also search for this author in You can also search for this author in

You can also search for this author in You can also search for this author in This gives the opportunity for database users to refer to their own expertise and knowledge to validate or not the accuracy of the original source, species name and distribution (ideally, giving feedback to the AmazonFish project, The geographic coordinates of the sites were compared to the location name of the sub-basin given in the source. Dagosta, F. C. P. & De Pinna, M. C. The Fishes of the Amazon: Distribution and Biogeographical Patterns, with a Comprehensive List of Species. You can also search for this author in Learn more.

Modern zoos and aquariums often are "gene banks" for Species360 records are accepted by international regulatory bodies such as In 1973, Ulysses Seal and Dale Makey proposed the Since 1989, the organisation has been incorporated as a non-profit entity under an international Board of Trustees elected by subscribing member institutions. You can also search for this author in You can also search for this author in You can also search for this author in Finally, the shapefile delineates all the sub-drainages, along with the corresponding geographic information (The database results from the transnational collaborative project AmazonFish (ERANetLAC/DCC-0210) whose purpose was to identify and compile all known information sources available on freshwater fish species occurrences for the entire Amazon drainage basin. The database is organised in two sub-datasets and one shapefile. You can also search for this author in the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in A convex hull envelop was delineated for each species based on its occurrence points, resulting in a list of sub-drainages potentially occupied by a given species. A. You can also search for this author in