Data underlying the publication: "Spatial dependency in abundance of Queen conch, Aliger gigas, in the Caribbean, indicates the importance of surveying deep-water distributions"
doi:10.4121/14873118.v1
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doi: 10.4121/14873118
doi: 10.4121/14873118
Datacite citation style:
Boman, B.E.; de Graaf, Martin; Nagelkerke, L.A.J.; Smaal, Aad C.; Izioka-Kuramae, A. et. al. (2021): Data underlying the publication: "Spatial dependency in abundance of Queen conch, Aliger gigas, in the Caribbean, indicates the importance of surveying deep-water distributions". Version 1. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/14873118.v1
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Dataset
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categories
geolocation
Northern Caribbean (St Eustatius, Saba Bank, Anguilla)
time coverage
2011, 2013, 2014, 2015
licence
CC BY-SA 4.0
Evaluate how the spatial distribution of a heavily exploited marine gastropod (i.e., Queen conch) varies in response to a number of known biotic and abiotic variables within and between sites that vary in environmental conditions. A novel towed video system complemented belt transects to estimate adult queen conch densities throughout its depth range. Bayesian hierarchical spatial models (Integrated Nested Laplace approximations) modeled distribution patterns of adult conch and indicated that the general patchy distribution pattern and the lack of strong generic location over-crossing relationships between abiotic and biotic factors and adult conch abundance and distribution is likely to at least partly due to this spatial dependency and location-specific factors, that affect different parts of the conch life-history.
history
- 2021-07-02 first online, published, posted
publisher
4TU.ResearchData
format
csv
organizations
Aquaculture and Fisheries, Wageningen University & ResearchWageningen Marine Research, Wageningen University & Research
DATA
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Queen_conch_count_Boman2021.csv -
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