| Literature DB >> 24855436 |
Sarah Faulwetter1, Vasiliki Markantonatou2, Christina Pavloudi3, Nafsika Papageorgiou4, Kleoniki Keklikoglou4, Eva Chatzinikolaou4, Evangelos Pafilis4, Georgios Chatzigeorgiou4, Katerina Vasileiadou5, Thanos Dailianis4, Lucia Fanini4, Panayota Koulouri4, Christos Arvanitidis4.
Abstract
The study of ecosystem functioning - the role which organisms play in an ecosystem - is becoming increasingly important in marine ecological research. The functional structure of a community can be represented by a set of functional traits assigned to behavioural, reproductive and morphological characteristics. The collection of these traits from the literature is however a laborious and time-consuming process, and gaps of knowledge and restricted availability of literature are a common problem. Trait data are not yet readily being shared by research communities, and even if they are, a lack of trait data repositories and standards for data formats leads to the publication of trait information in forms which cannot be processed by computers. This paper describes Polytraits (http://polytraits.lifewatchgreece.eu), a database on biological traits of marine polychaetes (bristle worms, Polychaeta: Annelida). At present, the database contains almost 20,000 records on morphological, behavioural and reproductive characteristics of more than 1,000 marine polychaete species, all referenced by literature sources. All data can be freely accessed through the project website in different ways and formats, both human-readable and machine-readable, and have been submitted to the Encyclopedia of Life for archival and integration with trait information from other sources.Entities:
Keywords: Polychaeta; behaviour; biological traits; database; functional traits; larvae; life cycle; life history; literature; morphology; reproduction
Year: 2014 PMID: 24855436 PMCID: PMC4030217 DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.2.e1024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biodivers Data J ISSN: 1314-2828
Figure 1.Screenshot of the Scratchpads interface to the Polytraits database.
Figure 2.a) Different types of literature sources stored in the Polytraits database; b) Origin of the information in the Polytraits database. Most information is contained in books and review papers, whereas on average, a single research paper contains little information. Graph based on data in Suppl. material 4 and Suppl. material 5.
The most employed literature references (more than 100 taxon-modality records each) in the Polytraits database. The number of taxon-modality records supported by each reference is given, as well as the number of records for which the original text excerpt is quoted (see also section "Quality control").
A full list of all references used to collect data for the Polytraits database can be found in Suppl. material 3.
| Reference | Nr. of records (total) | Nr. of records withtext excerpt | Nr. of records withouttext excerpt |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 5466 | 5466 | 0 |
|
| 2252 | 2252 | 0 |
|
| 1756 | 1755 | 1 |
|
| 1540 | 1540 | 0 |
| Expert's Judgement | 1131 | 763 | 368 |
|
| 530 | 324 | 206 |
|
| 502 | 497 | 5 |
|
| 491 | 1 | 490 |
|
| 452 | 327 | 125 |
|
| 450 | 220 | 230 |
|
| 410 | 388 | 22 |
|
| 346 | 324 | 22 |
|
| 214 | 214 | 0 |
|
| 203 | 201 | 2 |
|
| 201 | 34 | 167 |
|
| 181 | 120 | 61 |
|
| 178 | 140 | 38 |
|
| 139 | 117 | 22 |
|
| 126 | 23 | 103 |
|
| 124 | 124 | 0 |
|
| 114 | 82 | 32 |
|
| 111 | 59 | 52 |
Figure 3.Flowchart of the data entry and publication process of the biological traits data in the Polytraits database. Starting with a species list for which data are to be collected, the respective taxa are entered in the database by the user. For each taxon, the required information is gathered from the literature. Data are always connected to their literature reference in the database and often the original text passage is also stored. Once in the database, the data can be accessed through an application programming interface (API), which also serves the Polychaetes Scratchpads, where data are displayed and can be browsed through a biological classification. Furthermore, data can be downloaded for offline use in various formats, and finally they can be browsed through the web portal of the Encyclopedia of Life.
Figure 4.Taxonomic rank and status of taxa in the Polytraits database. Graph based on data in Suppl. material 6.
Figure 5.Number of valid species contained in the Polytraits database, per family. Graph based on data in Suppl. material 7.
Figure 6.Number of taxon-modality-value records on family, genus and species level, per family. Graph based on data in Suppl. material 8.
Number of taxon-modality-literature records per family (for all taxa in each family), as well as the number and percentage of these records for which the original text excerpt from the literature has also been recorded.
| Family | Total nr. of records | Nr. of entries withtext excerpt | % of entries with text excerpt | % of entries without text excerpt |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 3168 | 3012 | 95.08 | 4.92 |
|
| 2860 | 2541 | 88.85 | 11.15 |
|
| 2190 | 1758 | 80.27 | 19.73 |
|
| 1820 | 1529 | 84.01 | 15.99 |
|
| 1469 | 1331 | 90.61 | 9.39 |
|
| 1257 | 1189 | 94.59 | 5.41 |
|
| 1171 | 696 | 59.44 | 40.56 |
|
| 1103 | 987 | 89.48 | 10.52 |
|
| 910 | 740 | 81.32 | 18.68 |
|
| 818 | 740 | 90.46 | 9.54 |
|
| 710 | 532 | 74.93 | 25.07 |
|
| 644 | 509 | 79.04 | 20.96 |
|
| 615 | 562 | 91.38 | 8.62 |
|
| 568 | 501 | 88.2 | 11.8 |
|
| 561 | 453 | 80.75 | 19.25 |
|
| 516 | 462 | 89.53 | 10.47 |
|
| 500 | 259 | 51.8 | 48.2 |
|
| 480 | 422 | 87.92 | 12.08 |
|
| 455 | 121 | 26.59 | 73.41 |
|
| 356 | 136 | 38.2 | 61.8 |
|
| 339 | 152 | 44.84 | 55.16 |
|
| 283 | 257 | 90.81 | 9.19 |
|
| 279 | 233 | 83.51 | 16.49 |
|
| 279 | 176 | 63.08 | 36.92 |
|
| 278 | 234 | 84.17 | 15.83 |
|
| 197 | 191 | 96.95 | 3.05 |
|
| 164 | 121 | 73.78 | 26.22 |
|
| 153 | 63 | 41.18 | 58.82 |
|
| 152 | 113 | 74.34 | 25.66 |
|
| 130 | 76 | 58.46 | 41.54 |
|
| 115 | 42 | 36.52 | 63.48 |
|
| 71 | 58 | 81.69 | 18.31 |
|
| 60 | 55 | 91.67 | 8.33 |
|
| 33 | 31 | 93.94 | 6.06 |
|
| 32 | 32 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 23 | 23 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 23 | 23 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 19 | 19 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 18 | 18 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 16 | 16 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 10 | 10 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 9 | 9 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 8 | 8 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 8 | 7 | 87.5 | 12.5 |
|
| 8 | 8 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 8 | 8 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 7 | 7 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 7 | 7 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 7 | 7 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 7 | 7 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 6 | 6 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 6 | 6 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 6 | 6 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 6 | 6 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 6 | 6 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 6 | 6 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 6 | 6 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 6 | 6 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 6 | 6 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 5 | 5 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 5 | 5 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 5 | 5 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 5 | 5 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 4 | 4 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 4 | 4 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 4 | 4 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 4 | 4 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 3 | 3 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 3 | 3 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 3 | 3 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 3 | 3 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 2 | 2 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 2 | 2 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 2 | 2 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 2 | 2 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 1 | 1 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 1 | 1 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 1 | 1 | 100 | 0 |
|
| 1 | 1 | 100 | 0 |
Definition of traits and their modalities in the Polytraits database. Please refer to the extended version of this table at http://polytraits.lifewatchgreece.eu/terms for additional descriptions and literature references, related terms and synonyms, as well as Unique Resource Identifiers (URIs) and ontology mappings for each trait and modality.
|
| ||
|
| A measurement of the longest dimension of a body, typically between two distinct ends of the body. | |
|
| Maximum body size up to 2.5 mm. | |
|
| Maximum body size from 2.5 to 10 mm. | |
|
| Maximum body size from 11 to 20 mm. | |
|
| Maximum body size from 21 to 50 mm. | |
|
| Maximum body size from 51 to 80 mm. | |
|
| Maximum body size from 81 to 100 mm. | |
|
| Maximum body size more than 100 mm. | |
|
| A group of species which satisfy the biological definition of species, that is, they are reproductively isolated from each other, but they are not morphologically distinguishable (or at least are not readily or reliably distinguishable on a morphological basis) ( | |
|
| ||
|
| Complex species reported in the literature. | |
|
| No complex species reported in the literature. | |
|
| The depth at which an organism occurs. Commonly defined based on ecological features of the zonation. | |
|
| ||
|
| The zone of the shore immediately above the highest water level and subjected to wetting by spray or wave splash ( | |
|
| The area of the foreshore and seabed that is exposed to the air at low tide and submerged at high tide, i.e., the area between tide marks. | |
|
| The zone of the shore immediately below the lowest water level and the edge of the continental shelf (ca. 200 m). | |
|
| The steep descent zone from 200 m to 4000 m depth. | |
|
| The zone between 4000 – 6000 m depth ( | |
|
| The sea floor deeper than 6000 m, such as that of the oceanic trenches. | |
|
| The depth at which an organism occurs in the water column. Commonly defined based on ecological features of the zonation. | |
|
| ||
|
| The zone of an ocean from the surface to 200 m where photosynthesis can occur, due to the penetration of light. | |
|
| Water column from the upper aphotic zone (ca. 200 m) to a depth of ca. 1000 m ( | |
|
| Water column from ca. 1000 m to a depth of ca. 2500 m ( | |
|
| The zone of the ocean below the bathypelagic zone, with its lowest boundary at about 6000 m. | |
|
| The zone of an ocean in oceanic trenches, lying between 6000 m and 10000 m. | |
|
| Organisms can be considered as ecosystem engineers when they directly or indirectly modulate the availability of resources to other species, by causing physical state changes in biotic or abiotic materials. In so doing they modify, maintain and/or create habitats ( | |
|
| ||
|
| “Umbrella term”. Used to capture information that a species is an ecosystem engineer, without specifying the type of engineering. | |
|
| “Umbrella term”. Used to capture information that a species is not an ecosystem engineer. | |
|
| Biodiffusors include organisms with activities that usually result in a constant and random local sediment biomixing over short distances ( | |
|
| Upward conveyors are vertically oriented species that typically feed head-down at depth in the sediment. Vertically oriented head-down feeders actively select and ingest particles at the deeper sediments and egest these non-locally as faeces in the sediment surface ( | |
|
| Downward conveyors exhibit a feeding strategy opposite to that of upward conveyors. Vertically oriented head-up feeders actively select and ingest particles at the surface and egest these non-locally as faeces in deeper sediment strata ( | |
|
| Regenerators are excavators that dig and continuously maintain burrows in the sediment and by doing so they mechanically transfer sediment from depth to the surface. | |
|
| Ventilation occurs when animals flush their burrows with overlying water for respiratory and feeding purposes. Blind-ended ventilation occurs when I-shaped burrows are flushed uni- or bidirectionally depending on the permeability of the sediment ( | |
|
| In open-ended ventilation the burrows are U-shaped and can be flushed easily from one end to the other ( | |
|
| Species which create structures which in turn form new habitats for other species. | |
|
| The feeding structures of the polychaetes vary, reflecting the diversity of feeding types. There are two major anatomical/morphological features involved in the polychaetes feeding: the pharynx and the feeding structures of the prostomium (e.g. palps) ( | |
|
| ||
|
| A sac-like pharynx relying on fluid pressure from the coelom for eversion ( | |
|
| A variable set of folds, musculature and glands, present on the ventral side of many polychaetes, is usually referred to as a ventral pharynx and is the most common form in | |
|
| The ventral and lateral walls of the buccal region are muscular and the lining is sclerotized into a varying number of eversible jaw pieces. The jaws are separated into a pair of ventral mandibles and two or more pairs of lateral maxillae ( | |
|
| The pharynx has thickened, strongly muscular walls and can be retracted into a sheath. In other cases the pharynx is partially retracted and partially inverted. The mouth proper is located at the tip of the pharynx when fully everted ( | |
|
| The buccal cavity lacks obvious differentiation of the wall and it is not eversible. In some species, if the buccal cavity is present at all, it is only a transient larval structure and becomes completely occluded ( | |
|
| Other structures as palps, tentacles or a radiolar crown ("grooved palps"). | |
|
| The common diet of an organism that includes the food items which are enzymatically and behaviourally capable of using. | |
|
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|
| An organism that feeds by preying on other organisms, killing them for food ( | |
|
| Any organism which feeds on particulate organic matter, including plankton, suspended in the water column ( | |
|
| An organism that feeds on mud or sand and may show a little discrimination in the size or type of particles eaten. The sediment is ingested and any digestible organic material is assimilated as it passes through the alimentary canal. | |
|
| Some deposit feeders do not ingest sediment haphazardly but use their palps or buccal organs to sort organic material from the sediment prior to ingestion. The method of sorting varies according to the types of palps present. | |
|
| “Umbrella term”. Any organism which feeds on fragmented particulate organic matter from the substratum ( | |
|
| Organisms which feed on a mixed diet including plant and animal material ( | |
|
| Any organism that actively feeds on dead animals. | |
|
| An animal that feeds on plants or algae, or parts of them. | |
|
| The place in which an organism lives. It is defined for the marine environment according to geographical location, physiographic features as well as the physical and chemical environment (including salinity, wave exposure, strength of tidal streams, geology, biological zone, substratum, 'features' (e.g. crevices, overhangs, rockpools) and 'modifiers' (e.g. sand-scour, wave-surge, substratum mobility) ( | |
|
| ||
|
| Macroalgae surfaces, such as | |
|
| Solid, massive structure which is created by accumulations of organisms, usually rising from the seabed, or at least clearly forming a substantial, discrete community or habitat which is very different from the surrounding seabed. The structure of the reef may be composed almost entirely of the reef building organism and its tubes or shells, or it may to some degree be composed of sediments, stones and shells bound together by the organisms ( | |
|
| A hollow normally eroded in a cliff, with the penetration being greater than the width at the entrance ( | |
|
| Crevices are narrow cracks in a hard substratum < 10 mm wide at its entrance, with the penetration being greater than the width at the entrance. Fissures are cracks in a hard substratum > 10 mm wide at its entrance, with the depth being greater than the width at the entrance ( | |
|
| A coralligenous habitat is defined by the presence of a bioherm of coralline algae grown at low irradiance levels and in relatively calm waters ( | |
|
| Epibiont of other species. | |
|
| An overhanging part of a rock formation. | |
|
| A depression in the littoral zone of a rocky seashore, where, during low tide, seawater is left behind ( | |
|
| A marsh whose water contains a considerable quantity of dissolved salts. | |
|
| Habitat associated with seagrass meadows communities. Seagrasses are flowering plants that are adapted to living fully submerged and rooted in estuarine and marine environments ( | |
|
| A line on the shore composing debris deposited by a receding tide; commonly used to denote the line of debris at the level of extreme high water ( | |
|
| Under unattached rocks that can be very large (> 1024 mm), large (512 – 1024 mm) or small (256 – 512 mm) ( | |
|
| Pelagic habitat. | |
|
| Deposits with a high water content (near or above the liquid limit), where the percolating skeleton is made of fine-grained soils (clay fraction above ~ 20%), with a high degree of saturation, and subjected to low effective confinement ( | |
|
| The simultaneous demand by two or more organisms or populations or species for an essential common resource that is actually or potentially in limited supply or the detrimental interaction between two or more organisms or species seeking a common resource that is not limited ( | |
|
| ||
|
| Competition with other annelids that are in adult stage. The interaction can be between different organisms, populations or species. | |
|
| Competition with crustaceans that are in adult stage. | |
|
| Competition with other annelids that are in larval stage. The interaction can be between different organisms, populations or species. | |
|
| Competition with crustaceans that are in larval stage. | |
|
| Competition with mollusks. | |
|
| Maximum length of time that any particular organism can be expected to live. | |
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|
| Life span shorter than a year. | |
|
| Life span between 1 and 3 years. | |
|
| Life span between 3 and 5 years. | |
|
| Life span more than 5 years. | |
|
| Movement of an organism or group from one habitat or location to another ( | |
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|
| “Umbrella term”. Used to capture information that a species in its adult stage is migratory. | |
|
| “Umbrella term”. Used to capture information that a species in its adult stage is non-migratory and remains within the same area. | |
|
| The capability of an organism to move spontaneously and freely ( | |
|
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|
| An organism that moves along on the substratum via movements of its legs, appendages (e.g. parapodia and chaetae) or muscles ( | |
|
| An organism that lives or moves in a burrow in soft sediments. | |
|
| An organism that swims through the water column via movements of its fins, legs or appendages, via undulatory movements of the body or via jet propulsion; includes pelagic phases during reproduction (swarming at the surface) ( | |
|
| Permanently attached to a substratum (non-motile) or capable of movement across (or through) it (semi-motile) ( | |
|
| The general physical characteristics of the marine environment in which an organism lives ( | |
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|
| Any part of the coast not within a marine inlet, strait or lagoon, including offshore rocks and small islands. This includes | |
|
| Seabed beyond three miles (5 km) from the shore. | |
|
| Strait is a narrow channel of water that connects two larger bodies of water, and thus lies between two land masses. | |
|
| Fjord is a long and narrow sea inlet with high steeply sloped walled sides. A fjord is a landform created during a period of glaciation. Includes also sea lochs. | |
|
| Ria is a submergent coastal landform where sea levels rise either in relation to the land or as a result of eustatic sea level change; where the global sea levels rise or isostatic sea level change; where the land sinks. When this happens valleys which were previously at sea level become submerged. Includes also voes. | |
|
| A semi-enclosed coastal body of water with one or more rivers or streams flowing into it, and with a free connection to the open sea. | |
|
| An area of water bordered by land on three sides. Includes also harbours and marinas. | |
|
| Enclosed bodies of water separated or partially separated from the sea by shingle, sand or sometimes rock and with a restricted exchange of water with the sea, yielding varying salinity regimes. | |
|
| A marine hydrothermal vent is a marine benthic feature where heat generated due to tectonic activity, either at divergent plate boundaries or convergent ocean plates where back-arc spreading occurs, is released or 'vented' to the surface. The resultant high temperature water jets are laden with dissolved metals and minerals. | |
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| Organism categories that feed by preying on the present species. | |
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| Prey for other annelids. | |
|
| Prey for crustacean species. | |
|
| Prey for fish species. | |
|
| Prey for bird species. | |
|
| Prey for mollusks. | |
|
| Prey for echinoderm species. | |
|
| “Umbrella term”. Used to capture information that an organism, population or species is living alone or interacting with others forming groups/communities or colonies (through asexual reproduction). | |
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|
| Species that interact/live with algae. | |
|
| Species that interact/live with seagrass meadows. | |
|
| Species that interact/live with annelids. | |
|
| Species that interact/live with bacteria. | |
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| Species that interact/live with crustaceans. | |
|
| Species that interact/live with fish. | |
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| Species that interact/live with mollusks. | |
|
| Species that interact/live with nematodes. | |
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| Species that interact/live with echinoderms. | |
|
| Species that interact/live with cnidarians. | |
|
| Species that interact/live with poriferans. | |
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| Species that interact/live with branchiostomids. | |
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| Species that interact/live with bryozoans. | |
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| Species that interact/live with entoproctans. | |
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| The surface on which an organism lives. The substrate may simply provide structural support, or may provide nutrients ( | |
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|
| Any stable hard substratum not separated into boulders or smaller sediment units. | |
|
| Unattached rock, of large (512 – 1024 mm) or very large (> 1024 mm) size ( | |
|
| Unattached rock, of small (256 – 512 mm) size ( | |
|
| Sediment characterised by an average particle diameter between 64 and 256 mm. | |
|
| Sediment characterised by an average particle diameter between 4 and 64 mm. | |
|
| An environmental material which is composed of pieces of rock that are at least two millimeters (2 mm) in its largest dimension and no more than 75 millimeters. | |
|
| 50 – 80% gravel; 20 – 50% sand. | |
|
| 50 – 80% gravel; 20 – 50% mud. | |
|
| 50 – 80% gravel; 20 – 50% mud and sand. | |
|
| Sediment particles diameter between 0.5 – 4 mm; the sand fraction is > 80%. | |
|
| Sediment particles diameter between 0.063 – 0.5 mm; the sand fraction is > 80%. | |
|
| 50 – 80% sand; 20 – 50% gravel. | |
|
| 50 – 80% sand; 20 – 50% mud and sand. | |
|
| 50 – 80% sand; 20 – 50% mud. | |
|
| 50 – 80% mud; 20 – 50% sand. | |
|
| 50 – 80% mud; 20 – 50% sand and gravel. | |
|
| 50 – 80% mud; 20 – 50% gravel. | |
|
| Fine particles of silt and/or clay < 0.063 mm; the silt/clay fraction is > 80% ( | |
|
| Sediment characterised by an average particle diameter between 3.9 and 63 micrometers. | |
|
| Sediment characterised by an average particle diameter between 1 and 3.9 micrometers. | |
|
| Mixtures of a variety of sediment types composed of pebble/gravel/sand/mud. This category includes muddy gravels, muddy sandy gravels, gravelly muds, and muddy gravelly sands. | |
|
| E.g. wood, metal or concrete structures. | |
|
| The range of salinity in which an organism is capable to survive and grow ( | |
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|
| The capability of an organism to live in environments of average marine water salinity (30 – 40 ‰). | |
|
| The capability of an organism to live in environments of variable salinity (18 – 40 ‰). | |
|
| The capability of an organism to live in brackish water having a wide range of salinity between 18 ‰ and 30 ‰. | |
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| The capability of an organism to live in brackish water with low salinity (< 18 ‰). | |
|
| The range of temperature in which an organism is capable to survive and grow. | |
|
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|
| The capability of an organism to live in cold water environments (< 0 – 10 °C). | |
|
| The capability of an organism to live in environments of average temperatures (10 – 25 °C). | |
|
| The capability of an organism to live in warm water environments (> 25 °C). | |
|
| The sensitivity of an organism to organic enrichment, classfied through the AMBI index ( | |
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|
| Species very sensitive to organic enrichment and present under unpolluted conditions (initial state). | |
|
| Species indifferent to enrichment, always present in low densities with non-significant variations with time (from initial state to slightly unbalanced condition). | |
|
| Species tolerant to excess organic matter enrichment. These species may occur under normal conditions, but their populations are stimulated by organic enrichment (slightly unbalanced condition). | |
|
| Second-order opportunistic species (slightly to pronouncedly unbalanced condition). | |
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| First-order opportunistic species (pronouncedly unbalanced condition). | |
|
| Materials used for the construction of an organism’s tube or burrow (if present). | |
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|
| Tubes/burrows constructed of clay, a group of hydrous aluminium phyllosilicate minerals that are typically less than 3.9 micrometres in diameter. | |
|
| Tubes/burrows constructed of gravel, an environmental material which is composed of pieces of rock that are at least two millimeters (2 mm) in its largest dimension and no more than 75 millimeters. | |
|
| Tubes/burrows constructed of sand, a naturally occurring granular material composed of finely divided rock and mineral particles. | |
|
| Tubes/burrows constructed of mud, a liquid or semi-liquid mixture of water and fine particles of silt and/or clay < 0.063 mm; the silt/clay fraction is > 80% ( | |
|
| Tubes/burrows constructed of dead skeleton materials found in the environment (e.g. shells, algal parts). | |
|
| Tubes/burrows constructed of bodily secretions, usually mucus. | |
|
| Tubes constructed of calcium carbonate. | |
|
| The type of food an organism prefers. The modalities of this trait might be expanded in the future. | |
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| ||
|
| Algae as food source. | |
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| Bacteria as food source. | |
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| ||
|
| Ciliates as food source. | |
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| Crustaceans as food source. | |
|
| Diatoms as food source. | |
|
| Flagellates as food source. | |
|
| Foraminiferans as food source. | |
|
| Mollusks as food source. | |
|
| Particles of organic material from dead and decomposing organisms as food source. | |
|
| Unselective ingestion of sediment. | |
|
| Fish, incl. their larvae, as food source. | |
|
| Ascidians, incl. their larvae, as food source. | |
|
| Echinoderms, incl. their larvae, as food source. | |
|
| Cnidarians as food source. | |
|
| ||
|
| Habitat type of the larval settlement and early development after metamorphosis. | |
|
| ||
|
| Macroalgae surfaces, such as | |
|
| Solid, massive structure which is created by accumulations of organisms, usually rising from the seabed, or at least clearly forming a substantial, discrete community or habitat which is very different from the surrounding seabed. The structure of the reef may be composed almost entirely of the reef building organism and its tubes or shells, or it may to some degree be composed of sediments, stones and shells bound together by the organisms ( | |
|
| A hollow normally eroded in a cliff, with the penetration being greater than the width at the entrance ( | |
|
| Crevices are narrow cracks in a hard substratum < 10 mm wide at its entrance, with the penetration being greater than the width at the entrance. Fissures are cracks in a hard substratum > 10 mm wide at its entrance, with the depth being greater than the width at the entrance ( | |
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| A coralligenous habitat is defined by the presence of a bioherm of coralline algae grown at low irradiance levels and in relatively calm waters ( | |
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| Epibiont of other species. | |
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| An overhanging part of a rock formation. | |
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| A depression in the littoral zone of a rocky seashore, where, during low tide, seawater is left behind ( | |
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| A marsh whose water contains a considerable quantity of dissolved salts. | |
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| Habitat associated with seagrass meadows communities. Seagrasses are flowering plants that are adapted to living fully submerged and rooted in estuarine and marine environments ( | |
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| A line on the shore composing debris deposited by a receding tide; commonly used to denote the line of debris at the level of Extreme High Water ( | |
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| Under unattached rocks that can be very large (> 1024 mm), large (512 – 1024 mm) or small (256 – 512 mm) ( | |
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| Pelagic habitat. | |
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| Deposits with a high water content (near or above the liquid limit), where the percolating skeleton is made of fine-grained soils (clay fraction above ~ 20%), with a high degree of saturation, and subjected to low effective confinement ( | |
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| The capability of a juvenile to move spontaneously and freely. | |
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| An organism that moves along on the substratum via movements of its legs, appendages (e.g. parapodia and chaetae) or muscles ( | |
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| An organism that lives or moves in a burrow in soft sediments. | |
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| An organism that moves through the water column via movements of its fins, legs or appendages, via undulatory movements of the body or via jet propulsion; includes pelagic phases during reproduction (swarming at the surface) ( | |
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| Permanently attached to a substratum (non-motile) or capable of moving across (or through) it (semi-motile) ( | |
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| The mode of development from the larval to the adult stage. | |
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| There are no intermediate larval stage(s) or postembryonic metamorphoses of any kind. Embryonic development culminates in the hatching or birth of a fully formed, albeit miniature adult ( | |
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| One or more successive, free-living larval stages intervene between embryo and adult, with a more-or-less abrupt transition, or metamorphosis, between the last larval stage and the adult ( | |
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| The existence of two distinct larval types, feeding and non-feeding, has established the current paradigm for larval ecology. Feeding larvae are those that can capture and use exogenous food, whereas non-feeding larvae are those that cannot capture or use exogenous food ( | |
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| A larval development strategy in which small eggs are converted into larger juveniles by means of larval feeding and growth ( | |
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| “Umbrella term” describing the maternal sources of nutrition and including the terms lecithotrophy, adelphophagy, and translocation of nutrients. | |
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| Larvae development in the water column or on/in soft- or hard-bottom substrates | |
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| Development on or near the bottom of a water body. | |
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| Development in the water column. | |
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| Defines the location of the parental care (if provided), either near the body of the parent or at a distance from it. | |
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| Parental care is provided through e.g. protective structures, but not on the body of the parent or in its immediate living environment (e.g. in a burrow, tube or nest). | |
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| Parental care is provided either on the body of the parent or in its immediate living environment (e.g. in a burrow, tube or nest). | |
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| Generally, any anatomical remodelling between opposing life-history periods, i.e. between the larval and the adult stage, can be considered as a form of metamorphosis ( | |
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| The metamorphosis is accompanied by massive internal change coupled with catastrophic destruction of the larval tissues. Huge chunks of the larval body, its tissues and organs, are digested away and reabsorbed, or simply discarded ( | |
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| The adult develops from the juvenile through a process of extension and differential growth, including different larval stages but without a drastic change of the body plan. | |
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| Any parental trait that enhances the fitness of a parent’s offspring after the offspring is released from the female body ( | |
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| “Umbrella term”. Used to capture information that a species provides parental care to its offspring. | |
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| Used to capture information that a species does not provide parental care to its offspring beyond supplying them with a small package of yolk that serves as an initial source of nutrition until the offspring are fully capable of feeding for themselves ( | |
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| Settlement is defined as the behavioural performance when pelagic larvae descend from the plankton to the benthos, and move upon the substratum with or without attaching to it. Settlement is reversible: a larva can swim up again from the substrate to resettle at another location ( | |
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| “Umbrella term”. Used to capture information that larvae choose some type of hard substrate for their settlement. | |
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| Particles defined in three size categories: very coarse sand and granules (1 – 4 mm); medium and coarse sand (0.25 – 1 mm); very fine and fine sand (0.063 – 0.25 mm) ( | |
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| Fine particles of silt and/or clay, < 0.063 mm diameter; the silt/clay fraction is > 80% ( | |
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| Sediment characterised by an average particle diameter between 1 and 3.9 micrometers. | |
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| Sediment characterised by an average particle diameter between 3.9 and 63 micrometers. | |
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| An environmental material which is composed of pieces of rock that are at least two millimeters (2 mm) in its largest dimension and no more than 75 millimeters. | |
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| Sediment characterised by an average particle diameter between 4 and 64 mm. | |
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| Sediment characterised by an average particle diameter between 64 and 256 mm. | |
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| Sediment characterised by an average particle diameter greater than 256 mm. | |
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| A complex aggregation of microorganisms marked by the excretion of a protective and adhesive matrix; usually adhering to a substratum. | |
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| Beginning of the first sexual reproductive cycle. Defined as the first ripening of gametes. | |
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| Reproductive maturity reached at an age younger than 2 months. | |
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| Reproductive maturity reached at an age between 2 to 6 months. | |
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| Reproductive maturity reached at an age between 6 months to a year. | |
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| Reproductive maturity reached at an age between 1 to 2 years. | |
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| Reproductive maturity reached at an age between 2 to 3 years. | |
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| Reproductive maturity reached at an age between 3 to 4 years. | |
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| Reproductive maturity reached at an age more than 4 years. | |
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| The mechanism of the development of the embryo(s), inside or outside of the parental organism. | |
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| Reproduction in which eggs are released by the female; development of offspring occurs outside the mother's body. | |
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| Reproduction in which fertilization and development take place within the female body and the developing embryo derives nourishment from the female. | |
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| Diameter of the eggs spawned by an organism. | |
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| Egg diameter up to 100 μm. | |
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| Egg diameter from 100 μm to 200 μm. | |
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| Egg diameter larger than 200 μm. | |
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| Form of reproduction of marine polychates in which the new individual arises by modification and separation from the posterior end of the worm in order to leave the bottom and reproduce ( | |
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| The organism undergoes epitokous metamorphosis. | |
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| The organism does not undergo epitokous metamorphosis. | |
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| Factors that can initiate or enhance reproduction. | |
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| Reproduction which is timed to particular phases of the lunar cycle (or the semilunar cycle of spring and neap tides) ( | |
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| Spawning as a result of a pheromonal interaction between swarming males and females. Hormonal factors may be involved not only in the timing of reproduction but also in sexual differentiation ( | |
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| Reproduction which is timed to a particular daylight length ( | |
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| Reproduction which is controlled by changes in water temperature. In some species, a certain temperature value is a prerequisite for reproduction to occur ( | |
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| Reproduction which is stimulated by changes in salinity ( | |
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| The potential reproductive capacity of an organism or population, measured by the number of gametes (eggs) or asexual propagules ( | |
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| Up to 50 eggs per female and reproductive event. | |
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| From 50 to 500 eggs per female and reproductive event. | |
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| From 500 to 2500 eggs per female and reproductive event. | |
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| From 2500 to 10000 eggs per female and reproductive event. | |
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| From 10000 to 20000 eggs per female and reproductive event. | |
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| From 20000 to 100000 eggs per female and reproductive event. | |
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| More than 100000 eggs per female and reproductive event. | |
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| Location of the union of male and female gametes. | |
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| Fertilization takes place within the female's body. | |
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| A method of reproduction during which the gametes (egg and sperm) unite outside the body. | |
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| A form of external fertilization in which the partners are in close contact ( | |
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| The production by an organism of new individuals that contain some portion of genetic material inherited from that organism. | |
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| Having separate sexes throughout life ( | |
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| Condition of hermaphroditic animals (and plants) in which the reproductive organs of both sexes are present and functional at the same time. | |
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| Sequential hermaphrodites are born as one sex, but can later change into the opposite sex. Can be subdivided into protandrous and protogynous hermaphroditism. | |
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| Reproduction that is not sexual; that is, reproduction that does not include recombining the genotypes of two parents. Includes all different types of asexual reproduction (budding; parthenogenesis etc). | |
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| Process of germ cell development in the female from the primordial germ cells through oogonia to the mature haploid ova. In polychaetes, two patterns have been identified: intraovarian and extraovarian ( | |
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| Occurs when oocytes are retained by the ovary until most or all of oogenesis (and vitellogenesis) is completed. Ovaries are usually large, structurally complex, and persistent throughout the sexual phase of the female ( | |
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| Occurs when small, previtellogenic oocytes are released from the ovary and complete vitellogenesis in the fluid-filled coelom. Ovaries are generally small, simple and sometimes have a transient nature ( | |
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| The ratio of male to female (or vice versa) in a population. | |
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| The ratio of female to male in the population is 1 to 1. | |
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| The number of females is higher in a population. | |
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| The number of males is higher in a population. | |
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| Number of times an individual can reproduce during its lifetime. | |
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| Breeding several times per lifetime. | |
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| Organisms that have only one brood during their life time and then the parent usually dies. | |
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| Water temperature that initiates or enhances reproduction. | |
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| Reproduction in cold water environments (< 0 – 10 °C). | |
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| Reproduction in environments of average temperatures (10 – 25 °C). | |
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| Reproduction in warm water environments (> 25 °C). | |
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| Ability to resorb all or part of the gametes instead of spawning them normally. | |
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| Organisms that have the ability of egg resorption. | |
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| Organisms that do not have the ability of egg resorption. | |
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| Conspicuous change in the organism's body structure prior to reproduction. | |
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| Organisms that undergo sexual metamorphosis. | |
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| Organisms that do not undergo sexual metamorphosis. | |
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| Period and frequency of spawning in a population. | |
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| Reproduction occurs all year round or for the most part of the year. | |
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| Yearly over a drawn out period of several weeks or a few months, or always in a defined season, peaks or epidemic swarming can occur within this period. | |
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| More than once per year, but in relatively defined peaks or intense periods that do not fall within a drawn-out period. | |
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| Different types of sperm that occur in organisms and fertilize the eggs. | |
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| Type of sperm that are released into the water and fertilize similarly released eggs ( | |
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| Type of sperm that are released freely into the ambient water but differ from ect-aquasperm in being gathered by, or in some other way reaching, the female ( | |
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| Have no contact with water when passed from male to female ( | |
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| Level of synchronization of the reproductive activity in a population. | |
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| Organisms whose populations undergo through a synchronized ripening of the gametes, usually culminating in an epidemic spawning event. | |
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| Organisms whose populations do not undergo through a synchronized ripening of the gametes. | |
Figure 7.Traits coverage with the total number of entries and the number of entries with and without text excerpt. Graph based on data in Suppl. material 9. Abbreviations of traits as follows: BP = Parental care / Brood protection; BS= Body size (max); COMP = Intra- and Interspecies competition; CPLX = Complex species; DEV = Developmental mechanism; DZ = Depth zonation (benthos); DZP = Depth zonation (pelagic); EGG = Egg size; EPKY = Epitoky; FAC = Factors triggering reproduction; FEC = Fecundity; FEED = Feeding type; FER = Fertilization type; FREQ = Spawning frequency of a population; HAB = Habitat type; HSET = Habitat type of settlement/early development; JMOB = Juvenile mobility; LDEV = Larval development; LFT = Larval feeding type; LIFE = Lifespan; LM = Larval mode of development; MAT = Age at first reproduction; MIGR = Migrations of adult; MOB = Mobility of adult; MV = Metamorphosis volume; OOG = Pattern of oogenesis; PC = Location of parental care; PHF = Physiographic feature; PRED = Predated by; PSR = Population sex ratio; REP = Mode of reproduction; RESORP = Resorption of eggs; RT = Reproduction temperature; RW = Ecosystem engineering; SAL = Survival salinity; SETTL = Substrate type of settlement; SM = Sexual metamorphosis; SOC = Sociability; SPERM = Sperm type; STRAT = Reproduction strategy of the individual; STRUCT = Feeding structure; SUBST = Substrate type; SYNC = Synchronization of spawning; TEMP = Survival temperature; TF = Typically feeds on; TOL = Tolerance (AMBI index); TUBE = Tube / burrow material.
Figure 8.Percentage of number of species, genus and families for which information is available, per trait. Graph based on data in Suppl. material 10. Abbreviations of traits as in Fig. 7.
Figure 9.Temporal distribution (publication year) of references used to collect polychaete trait information. URLs and other references without a publication year are excluded from the graph. Graph based on data in Suppl. material 11.
List of fields returned by the Polytraits database, either when downloading information from the (export format "default CSV file") or when accessing the database through the REST API.
| Column label | Column description |
|---|---|
| Taxon | The taxon for which the information was recorded. |
| Author | The author and year of the |
| Valid taxon | Currently accepted name of the |
| Valid author | Currently accepted name of the |
| Taxonomic status | Information on why |
| Source of synonymy | Literature reference for the |
| Parent taxon | The |
| Trait | The biological trait for which information is available (e.g. "Feeding type"). |
| Modality | The sub-category of the |
| Modality abbreviation | An abbreviated version of the often verbose |
| Traitvalue | Describes the affinity of the |
| Reference | Literature reference leading to the assignment of the |
| DOI | Digital Object Identifier (where available) of the |
| Value creator | Person who assigned the |
| Value creation date | Date and time when the above information was entered into the database. |
| Text Excerpt | A quotation of the original text passage from the literature source that led to the assignment of assignment of the |
| Text Excerpt creator | Person who entered the |
| Text Excerpt creation date | Date and time when the |
A method to search for taxa in the Polytraits database. Returns matching taxon identifiers.
URL: http://polytraits.lifewatchgreece.eu/taxon/{query}/{format}/?{other parameter key value pairs}
Example: Retrieve all taxon information about taxa starting with "" and return them as a numeric array: http://polytraits.lifewatchgreece.eu/taxon/Syllis/json/?exact=0&verbose=1&assoc=0
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| query | string | any taxon name | spaces have to be url-encoded, case-insensitive | ||
| format | string | json|xml | json | Optional. | |
| exact | boolean | 1|0 | 1 | optional | When true, returns only the exact match for the query string. When false, returns all matches beginning with the query string. |
| verbose | boolean | 1|0 | 0 | optional | When true, returns per taxon: |
| assoc | boolean | 1|0 | 0 | optional | When true, an associative array is returned with the taxon ID as keys. When false, a numeric array is returned. |
A method to retrieve trait information for one or more taxon identifiers from the Polytraits database. Returns all trait information for the given IDs.
URL: http://polytraits.lifewatchgreece.eu/traits/{query}/{format}/?{other parameter key value pairs}
Example: Retrieve all trait information about the taxa with ID 1 and 2 and return them as an associative array with the taxon IDs as keys:
The output fields are documented in Table 4.
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| query | integer or string | one or more taxon identifiers, comma-separated | Use “taxon” method to retrieve a list of IDs. | ||
| format | string | json|xml | json | Optional. | |
| verbose | boolean | 1|0 | 1 | Optional | When true, returns per taxon the fields documented in Table |
| assoc | boolean | 1|0 | 1 | optional | When true, an associative array is returned with the taxon ID as keys. When false, a numeric array is returned. |
| Rank | Scientific Name | Common Name |
|---|---|---|
| kingdom |
| Animals |
| phylum |
| Segmented worms |
| class |
| Bristle worms |
| Column label | Column description |
|---|---|
| scientificName | The taxon for which the information was recorded. |
| scientificNameAuthorship | The author and year of the taxon for which the information was recorded. |
| acceptedNameUsage | Currently accepted name and authorship of the scientificName (as stored in the Polytraits database – information might not be up to date with the latest taxonomic literature in some cases). |
| taxonomicStatus | The status of the use of the scientificName (e.g. objective synonym, subjective synonym) as stored in the Polytraits database. Empty if scientificName is the currently accepted name. |
| MeasurementOrFact | Unique Resource Identifier pointing to the definition of a biological trait. |
| measurementValue | Unique Resource Identifier pointing to the definition of a modality (trait category) which is expressed by the current taxon. |
| dcterms:bibliographicCitation | Full literature reference (including Digital Object Identifier (DOI) where present) supporting the trait information for the current taxon. |
| measurementRemarks | A quotation of the original text passage containing the trait information for the current taxon. |
| measurementDeterminedBy | Person who entered the trait information for this taxon into the database. |
| measurementDeterminedDate | Date the trait information was entered into the database or last modified. |