Wiley
Browse
1/1
9 files

Data Paper. Data Paper

dataset
posted on 2016-08-10, 04:52 authored by Benjamin Planque, Raul Primicerio, Kathrine Michalsen, Michaela Aschan, Grégoire Certain, Padmini Dalpadado, Harald Gjøsæater, Cecilie Hansen, Edda Johannesen, Lis Lindal Jørgensen, Ina Kolsum, Susanne Kortsch, Lise-Marie Leclerc, Lena Omli, Mette Skern-Mauritzen, Magnus Wiedmann

File List

SpeciesList.txt (MD5: 2368c64b689cf66e9ea3b9c9cd50372d)

PairwiseList.txt (MD5: 3affef42842b44ad881c52afbfb18ec7)

References.txt (MD5: b67f9c6520f279286c78c9eae1e1e440)


Revised Data Files August 2015

SpeciesList.txt (MD5: c7f529ed3022cbc3ed086a4f3431c03d)

PairWiseList.txt (MD5: 4df0f3426bb184f387cf1bd3fb6d4267)

References.txt (MD5: f4291faf30744df9f11678070caa2c1e)

PairWise2References.txt (MD5: 937abdd3de410350bf0f4a8359da5607)

Description

A food web is an ecological network and its topological description consists of the list of nodes, i.e., trophospecies, the list of links, i.e., trophic interactions, and the direction of interactions (who is the prey and who is the predator). Food web topologies are widely used in ecology to describe structural properties of communities or ecosystems. The selection of trophospecies and trophic interactions can be realized in different manners so that many different food webs may be constructed for the same community. In the Barents Sea, many simple food webs have been constructed. We present a comprehensive food web topology for the Barents Sea ecosystem, from plankton to marine mammals. The protocol used to compile the data set includes rules for the selection of taxa and for the selection and documentation of the trophic links. The resulting topology, which includes 244 taxa and 1589 trophic links, can serve as a basis for topological analyses, comparison with other marine ecosystems, or as a basis to build simulation models of the Barents Sea ecosystem. The data set consists of three related tables: (1) the list of taxa, (2) the list of pairwise interactions, and (3) the list of bibliographical references.

Key words: benthos; birds; fish; mammals; plankton; trophic interactions.

History

Usage metrics

    Ecology

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC