Data Package Metadata   View Summary

Global Climate Change Impacts on the Vegetation and Fauna of Mangrove Forested Ecosystems in Florida (FCE): Nekton Mass from March 2000 to April 2004

General Information
Data Package:
Local Identifier:knb-lter-fce.1170.5
Title:Global Climate Change Impacts on the Vegetation and Fauna of Mangrove Forested Ecosystems in Florida (FCE): Nekton Mass from March 2000 to April 2004
Alternate Identifier:LT_TDCS_McIvor_001
Alternate Identifier:DOI PLACE HOLDER
Abstract:

Bottomless lift nets are buried within the mangrove forest floor and raised remotely on slack high spring tides to enclose a 6m2 area. As the tide ebbs, fishes retreat into a subtidal refuge cleared when the tide has fallen. Three replicate nets have been sampled at 3 locations along a salinity gradient on Shark River for 4 years. Small resident forage fish and grass shrimp dominate the collections. Exotic species and estuarine transient species that use the estuary as a nursery are rare within the assemblage of fishes that routinely use the flooded forest.

Publication Date:2024-02-05
For more information:
Visit: http://fcelter.fiu.edu/perl/public_data_download.pl?datasetid=LT_TDCS_McIvor_001.txt
Visit: DOI PLACE HOLDER

Time Period
Begin:
2000-03-10
End:
2004-04-07

People and Organizations
Contact:McIvor, Carole (U.S. Geological Survery, South Florida Wetland Ecosystems Lab Field Technican) [  email ]
Contact:Information Manager (Florida Coastal Everglades LTER) [  email ]
Creator:McIvor, Carole (Florida Coastal Everglades LTER Program, Project Collaborator)
Associate:McIvor, Carole (U.S. Geological Survery, Project Lead PI)
Associate:Siverman, Noah (U.S. Geological Survery, Biological Technician)
Associate:Kuss, Kathleen (U.S. Geological Survery, Research Assistant)
Associate:Hill, Gary (U.S. Geological Survery, Chief Bio-Technician/Engineering Technician)
Associate:Buster, Noreen (U.S. Geological Survery, Research Assistant)
Associate:Krebs, Justin (U.S. Geological Survery, Research Assistant)

Data Entities
Data Table Name:
LT_TDCS_McIvor_001.csv
Description:
Global Climate Change Impacts on the Vegetation and Fauna of Mangrove Forested Ecosystems in Florida (FCE): Nekton Mass from March 2000 to April 2004
Detailed Metadata

Data Entities


Data Table

Data:https://pasta-s.lternet.edu/package/data/eml/knb-lter-fce/1170/5/ff931ac00256e8f8fdf3661a3caa65e9
Data:https://ezeml.edirepository.org/user-data/FCE-f0e3c733c734a74c59b05e8e85af19f4/uploads/knb-lter-fce.1170.4/LT_TDCS_McIvor_001.csv
Name:LT_TDCS_McIvor_001.csv
Description:Global Climate Change Impacts on the Vegetation and Fauna of Mangrove Forested Ecosystems in Florida (FCE): Nekton Mass from March 2000 to April 2004
Number of Records:3060
Number of Columns:6

Table Structure
Object Name:LT_TDCS_McIvor_001.csv
Size:149420 byte
Authentication:6270ef954da9ff1b8a0fb6523c8703d0 Calculated By MD5
Text Format:
Number of Header Lines:1
Record Delimiter:\r\n
Orientation:column
Simple Delimited:
Field Delimiter:,
Quote Character:"

Table Column Descriptions
 sitenameID Numberdatespeciesmasscount
Column Name:SITENAME  
Net_Number  
Date  
SpeciesName  
Nekton_mass  
Nekton_number  
Definition:Name of Collection SiteNet ID NumberSample Collection dateNekton Species NameNekton MassNekton Count
Storage Type:text  
ordinal  
datetime  
text  
data  
data  
Measurement Type:ordinalordinaldateTimenominalratioratio
Measurement Values Domain:
Definitiontext
Definitiontext
FormatYYYY-MM-DD
Precision1
Definitiontext
Unitgram
Precision0.01
Typereal
Unitdimensionless
Precision1
Typereal
Missing Value Code:      
Code-9999
ExplValue will never be recorded
Code-9999.00
ExplValue will never be recorded
Code-9999
ExplValue will never be recorded
Accuracy Report:            
Accuracy Assessment:            
Coverage:            
Methods:            

Data Package Usage Rights

This information is released under the Creative Commons license - Attribution - CC BY (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). The consumer of these data ("Data User" herein) is required to cite it appropriately in any publication that results from its use. The Data User should realize that these data may be actively used by others for ongoing research and that coordination may be necessary to prevent duplicate publication. The Data User is urged to contact the authors of these data if any questions about methodology or results occur. Where appropriate, the Data User is encouraged to consider collaboration or co-authorship with the authors. The Data User should realize that misinterpretation of data may occur if used out of context of the original study. While substantial efforts are made to ensure the accuracy of data and associated documentation, complete accuracy of data sets cannot be guaranteed. All data are made available "as is." The Data User should be aware, however, that data are updated periodically and it is the responsibility of the Data User to check for new versions of the data. The data authors and the repository where these data were obtained shall not be liable for damages resulting from any use or misinterpretation of the data. Thank you.

Keywords

By Thesaurus:
FCE KeywordsEverglades National Park, FCE, Florida Coastal Everglades LTER, ecological research, long-term monitoring, Shark River Slough, Harney River, mangrove forest, tidal inundation, nekton, lift net, nekton mass
LTER Controlled Vocabularycommunity structure, fishes, crustaceans, biomass, climate, ecosystems, species
LTER Core Research AreasDisturbance

Methods and Protocols

These methods, instrumentation and/or protocols apply to all data in this dataset:

Methods and protocols used in the collection of this data package
Description:

2 x 3 m2 bottomless lift nets (Rozas 1992, Bottomless lift net for sampling nekton on intertidal marshes. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 89: 287-92.); K-S test for length-frequency dist., RM ANOVA for site differences

Instrument(s):YSI Meter model NUM 85/10
Sampling Area and Study Extent
Sampling Description:

3 sites, one up-river (SRSMc-S2), one mid-river (SRSMc-S4), and one down-river (SRSMc-S3), with 3 nets at each site. Three permanent plots per site, nets folded into aluminum trenches set in the forest floor and deployed remotely from boardwalks. Sampled every two months (ideally), on the highest tides for that month (full moon or new moon).

Sampling Area And Frequency:

The Study Extent of this dataset includes the Shark River research sites within Everglades National Park, South Florida

Quality Control
Quality Control Step 1: 
Description:

Final validation when necessary done on identifications by ichthyological taxonomist specialist Dr. Ed Matheson, FMRI. Electronic files are checked against raw data; all specimens archived; reliance on all available expertise within lab.

People and Organizations

Publishers:
Organization:Environmental Data Initiative
Email Address:
info@edirepository.org
Web Address:
https://edirepository.org
Id:https://ror.org/0330j0z60
Creators:
Individual:Dr. Carole McIvor
Organization:Florida Coastal Everglades LTER Program
Position:Project Collaborator
Address:
U.S. Geological Survery,
Florida Integrated Science Center,
600 4th Street South,
St. Petersburg, FL 33701 USA
Phone:
727-803-8747 ext. 3022 (voice)
Phone:
727-803-2032 (fax)
Email Address:
carole_mcivor@usgs.gov
Web Address:
http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/
Contacts:
Individual: Carole McIvor
Organization:U.S. Geological Survery
Position:South Florida Wetland Ecosystems Lab Field Technican
Address:
U.S. Geological Survery,
Florida Integrated Science Center,
600 4th Street South,
St. Petersburg, FL 33701 USA
Phone:
727-803-8747 ext. 3022 (voice)
Phone:
727-803-2032 (fax)
Email Address:
carole_mcivor@usgs.gov
Web Address:
http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/
Organization:Florida Coastal Everglades LTER
Position:Information Manager
Address:
Florida International University,
11200 SW 8th Street, OE 148,
Miami, FL 33199 USA
Email Address:
fcelter@fiu.edu
Web Address:
https://fcelter.fiu.edu
Associated Parties:
Individual: Carole McIvor
Organization:U.S. Geological Survery
Address:
U.S. Geological Survery,
Florida Integrated Science Center,
600 4th Street South,
St. Petersburg, FL 33701 USA
Phone:
727-803-8747 ext. 3022 (voice)
Phone:
727-803-2032 (fax)
Email Address:
carole_mcivor@usgs.gov
Web Address:
http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/
Role:Project Lead PI
Individual: Noah Siverman
Organization:U.S. Geological Survery
Address:
U.S. Geological Survery,
Florida Integrated Science Center,
600 4th Street South,
St. Petersburg, FL 33701 USA
Phone:
727-803-8747 x3034 (voice)
Phone:
727-803-2031 (fax)
Email Address:
nsilverman@usgs.gov
Web Address:
http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/
Role:Biological Technician
Individual: Kathleen Kuss
Organization:U.S. Geological Survery
Address:
U.S. Geological Survery,
Florida Integrated Science Center,
600 4th Street South,
St. Petersburg, FL 33701 USA
Phone:
727-803-8747 x3022 (voice)
Phone:
727-803-2032 (fax)
Email Address:
kkuss@usgs.gov
Web Address:
http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/
Role:Research Assistant
Individual: Gary Hill
Organization:U.S. Geological Survery
Address:
U.S. Geological Survery,
Florida Integrated Science Center,
600 4th Street South,
St. Petersburg, FL 33701 USA
Phone:
727-803-8747 x3004 (voice)
Phone:
727-803-2031 (fax)
Email Address:
gary_l_hill@usgs.gov
Web Address:
http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/
Role:Chief Bio-Technician/Engineering Technician
Individual: Noreen Buster
Organization:U.S. Geological Survery
Address:
U.S. Geological Survery,
Florida Integrated Science Center,
600 4th Street South,
St. Petersburg, FL 33701 USA
Phone:
727-803-8747 x3114 (voice)
Phone:
727-803-2032 (fax)
Email Address:
nbuster@usgs.gov
Web Address:
http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/
Role:Research Assistant
Individual: Justin Krebs
Organization:U.S. Geological Survery
Address:
U.S. Geological Survery,
Florida Integrated Science Center,
600 4th Street South,
St. Petersburg, FL 33701 USA
Phone:
727-803-8747 x3082 (voice)
Phone:
727-803-2032 (fax)
Email Address:
jkrebs@usgs.gov
Web Address:
http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/
Role:Research Assistant
Metadata Providers:
Organization:Florida Coastal Everglades LTER
Address:
Florida International University,
11200 SW 8th Street, OE 148,
Miami, FL 33199 USA
Phone:
305-348-6054 (voice)
Email Address:
fcelter@fiu.edu
Web Address:
https://fcelter.fiu.edu
Id:https://ror.org/03davk141

Temporal, Geographic and Taxonomic Coverage

Temporal, Geographic and/or Taxonomic information that applies to all data in this dataset:

Time Period
Begin:
2000-03-10
End:
2004-04-07
Sampling Site: 
Description:SRSMc-S2
Site Coordinates:
Longitude (degree): -80.968Latitude (degree): 25.409
Sampling Site: 
Description:SRSMc-S3
Site Coordinates:
Longitude (degree): -81.077Latitude (degree): 25.365
Sampling Site: 
Description:SRSMc-S4
Site Coordinates:
Longitude (degree): -81.06Latitude (degree): 25.424

Project

Parent Project Information:

Title:Florida Coastal Everglades LTER: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research-the Coastal Everglades
Personnel:
Individual: Daniel Childers
Role:Lead Principal Investigator
Abstract:

We are investigating how variability in regional climate, freshwater inputs, disturbance, and perturbations affect the coastal Everglades ecosystem. Our long term research program focuses on testing the following central idea and hypotheses: Regional processes mediated by water flow control population and ecosystem level dynamics at any location within the coastal Everglades landscape. This phenomenon is best exemplified in the dynamics of an estuarine oligohaline zone where fresh water draining phosphorus-limited Everglades marshes mixes with water from the more nitrogen-limited coastal ocean. Hypothesis 1: In nutrient-poor coastal systems, long-term changes in the quantity or quality of organic matter inputs will exert strong and direct controls on estuarine productivity, because inorganic nutrients are at such low levels. Hypothesis 2: Interannual and long-term changes in freshwater flow controls the magnitude of nutrients and organic matter inputs to the estuarine zone, while ecological processes in the freshwater marsh and coastal ocean control the quality and characteristics of those inputs. Hypothesis 3: Long-term changes in freshwater flow (primarily manifest through management and Everglades restoration) will interact with long-term changes in the climatic and disturbance (sea level rise, hurricanes, fires) regimes to modify ecological pattern and process across coastal landscapes.

Additional Award Information:
Funder:National Science Foundation
Funder ID:https://ror.org/021nxhr62
Number:9910514
Title:Florida Coastal Everglades LTER: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research-the Coastal Everglades
URL:https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=9910514
Related Project:
Title:FCE LTER II: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research
Personnel:
Individual: Evelyn Gaiser
Id:https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2065-4821
Role:Lead Principal Investigator
Abstract:

Our FCE I research focused on understanding how dissolved organic matter from upstream oligotrophic marshes interacts with a marine source of phosphorus (P), the limiting nutrient, to control estuarine productivity where these two influences meet-in the oligohaline ecotone. This dynamic is affected by the interaction of local ecological processes and landscape-scale drivers (hydrologic, climatological, and human). During FCE I, our ideas about how these "upside-down" estuaries (Childers et al. 2006) function has evolved, and we have modified our central theme to reflect this new understanding. Our focus in FCE II will be even more strongly on the oligohaline ecotone region of our experimental transects. For FCE II, our overarching theme is: In the coastal Everglades landscape, population and ecosystem-level dynamics are controlled by the relative importance of water source, water residence time, and local biotic processes. This phenomenon is best exemplified in the oligohaline ecotone, where these 3 factors interact most strongly and vary over many [temporal and spatial] scales.Hypothesis 1: Increasing inputs of fresh water will enhance oligotrophy in nutrient-poor coastal systems, as long as the inflowing water has low nutrient content; this dynamic will be most pronounced in the oligohaline ecotone. Hypothesis 2: An increase in freshwater inflow will increase the physical transport of detrital organic matter to the oligohaline ecotone, which will enhance estuarine productivity. The quality of these allochthonous detrital inputs will be controlled by upstream ecological processes. Hypothesis 3: Water residence time, groundwater inputs, and tidal energy interact with climatic and disturbance regimes to modify ecological pattern and process in oligotrophic estuaries; this dynamic will be most pronounced in the oligohaline ecotone. Childers, D.L., J.N. Boyer, S.E. Davis, C.J. Madden, D.T. Rudnick, and F.H. Sklar, 2006. Relating precipitation and water management to nutrient concentration patterns in the oligotrophic "upside down" estuaries of the Florida Everglades. Limnology and Oceanography, 51(1): 602-616.

Additional Award Information:
Funder:National Science Foundation
Funder ID:https://ror.org/021nxhr62
Number:620409
Title:FCE LTER II: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research
URL:https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=0620409
Related Project:
Title:FCE LTER III: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research
Personnel:
Individual: Evelyn Gaiser
Id:https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2065-4821
Role:Lead Principal Investigator
Abstract:

Coastal ecosystems are being modified at unprecedented rates through interacting

pressures of global climate change and rapid human population growth, impacting natural coastal

resources and the services they provide. Located at the base of the shallow-sloping Florida peninsula, the Everglades wilderness and 6 million human residents are exceptionally exposed to both pressures. Further, freshwater drainage has accelerated saltwater intrusion over land and into the porous limestone aquifer, resulting in coastal ecosystem transgression and seasonal residential freshwater shortages. The unprecedented landscape-scale Everglades restoration process is expected to reverse some of these trends. However, it is not clear how uncertainties about climate change prognoses and their impacts (e.g., sea level rise (SLR), changes in storm activity or severity, and climate drivers of freshwater availability) may influence human activities (e.g., population growth, resource use, land-use change), and how their interaction will affect the restoration process that is already steeped in conflict. The Florida Coastal Everglades Long-Term Ecological Research (FCE LTER) program is dedicated to long-term coupled biophysical and cultural studies that expose and unravel complex feedbacks that generate distinctive patterns and processes in vulnerable coastal ecosystems. The overarching theme of FCE research is: In the coastal Everglades, climate change and resource management decisions interact to influence

freshwater availability, ecosystem dynamics, and the value and utilization of ecosystem services by people. Because they are highly sensitive to the balance of freshwater and marine influences,

coastal wetlands of the Florida Everglades provide an ideal system to examine how socio-ecological systems respond to and mitigate the effects of climate change and freshwater allocation decisions. The trans-disciplinary science conducted by the large FCE research team is revealing how estuary hydrodynamics and biogeochemistry may tilt on a fulcrum defined by the magnitude by which coastal pressures (SRL, storms) are mitigated by freshwater flows. We employ a socio-ecological framework to address how climate change interacts with political decisions to determine the sustainability of interconnected human-natural systems. In FCE I, we discovered how coastal nutrient supplies create an unusual “upside-down” productivity gradient in karstic estuaries. FCE II research used growing long-term datasets to reveal the sensitivity of this gradient to changes in hydrodynamics, nutrient availability, and salinity. In FCE III, we will use South Florida as an exemplary system for understanding how and why socio-ecological systems resist, adapt to, or mitigate the effects of climate change on ecosystem sustainability. We will examine how decisions about freshwater delivery to the Everglades influence -and are influenced by - the impact of SLR in this especially vulnerable landscape. Biophysical studies will focus on how this balance of fresh and marine sources influences biogeochemical cycling, primary production, organic matter dynamics, and trophic dynamics, to drive carbon gains and losses. We expand our spatio-temporal domain by employing powerful long-term datasets and experiments to determine legacies of past interactions, and to constrain models that will help guide a sustainable future for the FCE.

Additional Award Information:
Funder:National Science Foundation
Funder ID:https://ror.org/021nxhr62
Number:1237517
Title:FCE LTER III: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research
URL:https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1237517
Related Project:
Title:FCE LTER IV: Drivers of Abrupt Change in the Florida Coastal Everglades
Personnel:
Individual: Evelyn Gaiser
Role:Lead Principal Investigator
Abstract:

Coastal ecosystems like the Florida Everglades provide many benefits to society. They protect coastlines from storms and store carbon. They provide habitat and food for important fisheries. They also support tourism and local economies, and store freshwater for millions of people. The Florida Coastal Everglades Long Term Ecological Research (FCE LTER) program addresses how and why coastal ecosystems are changing in response to sea level rise and the actions of people. Like many coastal ecosystems, the Florida Everglades are threatened by the diversion of freshwater to support urban and agricultural expansion. At the same time, sea level rise has caused coastal ecosystems to become saltier, threatening the freshwater supply, stressing freshwater plants, and causing the soils to collapse. When the soils beneath coastal wetlands disappear, seawater invades even more quickly. Researchers in the FCE LTER are continuing long-term studies and experiments to understand how these changes influence ecosystem functions and services. They are also developing tools for resource managers to create an effective freshwater restoration program. The science team includes an active community of graduate students. As a group, they reach the public through education and outreach activities, and regularly advise policy-makers on resource management decisions. The FCE LTER research program addresses how changing fresh and marine supplies of water influence coastal ecosystem dynamics through: (i) continued long-term assessment of changes in biogeochemistry, primary production, organic matter, and trophic dynamics in ecosystems along freshwater-to-marine gradients, (ii) maintenance of existing in situ and ex situ long-term experiments, (iii) use of high-resolution remote sensing, coupled with models to forecast landscape-scale changes, (iv) addition of synoptic satellite sites to capture discrete spatio-temporal responses to episodic disturbance, and (v) initiation of new experimental manipulations to determine drivers and mechanisms of resilience to saltwater intrusion. Data syntheses integrate month-to-annual and inter-annual data into models of water, nutrients, carbon, and species dynamics throughout the Everglades landscape to compare how ecosystems with different productivities and carbon stores respond (maintain, increase, or decline) to short- (pulses) and long-term changes (presses) in hydrologic connectivity. Understanding and predicting the drivers of abrupt changes in ecosystems is a key challenge in ecosystem ecology.

Additional Award Information:
Funder:National Science Foundation
Funder ID:https://ror.org/021nxhr62
Number:1832229
Title:LTER: Drivers of Abrupt Change in the Florida Coastal Everglades
URL:https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1832229&HistoricalAwards=false
Related Project:
Title:LTER: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystem Research
Personnel:
Individual: John Kominoski
Address:
Florida International University,
11200 S.W. 8th Street,
Miami, FL 33199 US
Email Address:
jkominos@fiu.edu
Id:https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0978-3326
Role:Lead Principal Investigator
Individual: James Fourqurean
Role:Co-Principal Investigator
Individual: Evelyn Gaiser
Role:Co-Principal Investigator
Individual: Jennifer Rehage
Role:Co-Principal Investigator
Individual: Kevin Grove
Role:Co-Principal Investigator
Abstract:

Coastal ecosystems like the Florida Everglades provide many benefits and services to society including protection from storms, habitat and food for important fisheries, support of tourism and local economies, filtration of fresh water, and burial and storage of carbon that offsets greenhouse gas emissions. The Florida Coastal Everglades Long Term Ecological Research (FCE LTER) program addresses how and why coastal ecosystems and their services are changing. Like many coastal ecosystems, the Florida Everglades has been threatened by diversion of fresh water to support urban and agricultural expansion. At the same time, sea-level rise has caused saltwater intrusion of coastal ecosystems which stresses freshwater species, causes elevation loss, and contaminates municipal water resources. However, restoration of seasonal pulses of fresh water may counteract these threats. Researchers in the FCE LTER are continuing long-term studies and experiments to understand how changes in freshwater supply, sea-level rise, and disturbances like tropical storms interact to influence ecosystems and their services. The science team is guided by a diversity and inclusion plan to attract diverse scientists at all career stages. The team includes resource managers – who use discoveries and knowledge from the FCE LTER to guide effective freshwater restoration – and an active community of academic and agency scientists, teachers and other educators, graduate, undergraduate, and high school students. The project has a robust education and outreach program that engages the research team with the general public to advance science discoveries and protection of coastal ecosystems.

Additional Award Information:
Funder:National Science Foundation
Funder ID:https://ror.org/021nxhr62
Number:2025954
Title:LTER: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystem Research
URL:https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=2025954&HistoricalAwards=false

Maintenance

Maintenance:
Description:

knb-lter-fce.1170.5: Updated metadata; enabled public data access, and changed file extension from .txt to .csv (no changes made to contents of data file); data collection is complete, and no new data will be appended.

knb-lter-fce.1170.3: Made changes to reflect metadata 'Read' only, no data download. This is a long-term trophic dynamics and community structure dataset and subsequent data will be appended. This data file combines files LT_TDCS_McIvor_001 (original & v1). The new PASTA file is LT_TDCS_McIvor_001. The FCE program is discontinuing its practice of versioning data as of March 2013.

Frequency:notPlanned
Other Metadata

Additional Metadata

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        |     |     |     |___element 'notes'
        |     |     |     |     |___text 'Standard taxonomic fish and crustacean keys for SW Florida species; voucher specimens ID\'d by Dr. Ed Matheson, FMRI, taxonomic specialist. Archived samples are either frozen at -15oC or fixed in 10% formalin and preserved in 70% ETOH.'
        |     |     |     |___text '\n            '
        |     |     |___text '\n            '
        |     |     |___element 'datasetInfoManagementNotes'
        |     |     |     |___text '\n               '
        |     |     |     |___element 'notes'
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Additional Metadata

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Additional Metadata

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Additional Metadata

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EDI is a collaboration between the University of New Mexico and the University of Wisconsin – Madison, Center for Limnology:

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