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Pacific Marine Energy Center benthic physical conditions, macrofauna, and groundfish abundancesSource

From 2010 to 2015, box core grabs were collected at permanent stations around the Pacific Marine Energy Center - North Energy Test Site (PMEC-NETS) off Newport, Oregon. At each box core station a conductivity, temperature, depth (CTD) cast was conducted. These data include the CTD from the bottom of the cast, sediment grain size analysis, total organic carbon and nitrogen analysis (for the first 3 years only) and macrofaunal organism abundances as retained on a 1 mm mesh sieve. From 2012 to 2015, additional box core grabs were collected around two of the anchors deployed at PMEC-NETS to assess potential changes to sediment conditions and/or organism abundances. From 2013 to 2015, box core samples also were collected in and around the South Energy Test Site (PMEC-SETS). The CTD, grain size, and organism abundances are included. Additionally from 2010 to 2015 beam trawls were conducted at 9 stations (a subset of the box core stations) around PMEC-NETS and CTD casts were conducted before the start of each trawl. Again the CTD data from the bottom of the cast are included. Organism data are fish densities based on the estimated number of meters covered by the trawl. No trawls were conducted at PMEC-SETS.

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CTDHydrokineticMHKMarineNETSOregonPMECPMEC-NETSPMEC-SETSSETSanchorsbenthicbox corecarbonconductivitydensitydepthenergyfishgroundfishinfaunamacrofaunanitrogenorganismpHphysicalpowersalinitysedimentsediment grain sizetemperaturetotal organictrawl
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XLSXXLSCSV
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Substance Identification Information from EPA's Substance RegistrySource

The Substance Registry Services (SRS) is the authoritative resource for basic information about substances of interest to the U.S. EPA and its state and tribal partners. Substances, particularly chemicals, can have many valid synonyms. For example, toluene, methyl benzene, and phenyl methane, are commonly used names for the same chemical. EPA programs collect environmental data for this chemical using each of these names, plus others. This diversity leads to problems when a user is looking for programmatic data for toluene but is unaware that the data is stored under the synonym methyl benzene. For each substance, the SRS identifies the statutes, EPA programs, as well as organization external to EPA, that track or regulate that substance and the synonym used by that statute, EPA program or external organization. Besides standardized information for each chemical, such as the Chemical Abstracts Services name and the Chemical Abstracts Number and the EPA Registry Name (the EPA standard name), the SRS also includes additional information, such as molecular weight and molecular formula. Additionally, an SRS Internal Tracking Number uniquely identifies each substance, enabling cross-walking between synonyms. EPA is providing a large .ZIP file providing the SRS data in CSV format, and a separate small metadata file in XML containing the field names and definitions.

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Tags:
biologicalbusiness objectscaschemicalchemical abstracts servicechemical idchemical identificationchemical nomenclaturecode setenvironmentepaintegrated taxonomic information systemitismolecular formulamolecular weightparameterphysicalregisterregistrarregistrationregistrysamplesorsrsstandardsubstancesubstance classificationsubstance identificationsubstance listssubstance registry servicessubstance registry systemsynonymsystem of registriestaxonomic serial numbertsnunited statesvirusweb service
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API
United State Environmental Protection Agencyabout 1 year ago