Data used to calculate 2008 and 2013 cumulative human impacts in: Halpern et al. 2015. Spatial and temporal changes in cumulative human impacts on the world's ocean. Seven data packages are available for this project: (1) supplementary data (habitat data and other files); (2) raw stressor data (2008 and 2013); (3) stressor data rescaled by one time period (2008 and 2013, scaled from 0-1); (4) stressor data rescaled by two time periods (2008 and 2013, scaled from 0-1); (5) pressure and cumulative impacts data (2013, all pressures); (6) pressure and cumulative impacts data (2008 and 2013, subset of pressures updated for both time periods); (7) change in pressures and cumulative impact (2008 to 2013).
This data set was collected at roughly 7-10 day intervals approximately 1 km offshore from Bolshie Koty on Lake Baikal. Depths span 0 - 250 m with regularity and frequently deeper. Zooplankton and phytoplankton are identified to species and lifestage where applicable. Temperature and Secchi depth are available for full time series, chlorophyll a and primary productivity are available since 1979. The data set has been under the direction of Mikhail Kozhov, Olga Kozhova and Lyubov Izmest'eva since roughly 1945. Data uploaded in 2008 correspond to analyses and descriptions in Hampton et al. 2008 (In press) Sixty Years of Environmental Change in the World's Largest Freshwater Lake - Lake Baikal, Siberia. Global Change Biology.
Data for "Cook BI, Wolkovich EM, Parmesan C. 2012. Divergent responses to spring and winter warming drive community level flowering trends. PNAS 109(23): 9000-9005." Data corresponds to supplemental information provided at: www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10. 1073/pnas.1118364109/-/DCSupplemental. Data presented here are regression coefficients (along with standard errors of the coefficients) calculated by using linear least-squares regressions. There are two data sets presented here--one corresponding to the first flowering dates at Chinnor, United Kingdom and the second one corresponds to the first flowering dates at Washington DC.
These time series data sample percent cover of Scleractinian corals by genus measured from photo quadrats. Percent cover is given for each quadrat, each site, each year from 1987 to 2011. Counts of juvenile corals conducted in situ and small colonies less than 4 cm diameter are pooled from all sites. Supplementary data include in situ seawater temperature daily mean from 1989 to 2011. These data were used to create the figures in Edmunds, P.J., 2013, Decadal-scale changes in the community structure of coral reefs in St. John, US Virgin Islands, Marine ecology Progress Series.