@globalfishingwatch/i18n-labels 1.2.170 → 1.2.171
This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
- package/en/datasets.json +32 -2
- package/es/datasets.json +32 -2
- package/fr/datasets.json +32 -2
- package/id/datasets.json +32 -2
- package/package.json +1 -1
- package/pt/datasets.json +32 -2
- package/source/datasets.json +32 -2
- package/val/datasets.json +32 -2
package/en/datasets.json
CHANGED
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@@ -2019,6 +2019,16 @@
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2019
2019
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"firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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2020
2020
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}
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2021
2021
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},
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2022
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+
"public-global-chlorophyl-max": {
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2023
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"name": "Chlorophyll-a concentration",
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2024
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"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring.<br/>\n<br/>\nChlorophyll-a concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived.<br/>\n<br/>\nScientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Source</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nThis level 3 product includes ocean color and satellite ocean biology data produced or collected under EOSDIS - https://earthdata.nasa.gov/about.<br/>\n<br/>\nThis dataset may be used for studying the biology and hydrology of coastal zones, changes in the diversity and geographical distribution of coastal marine habitats, biogeochemical fluxes and their influence in Earth's oceans and climate over time, and finally the impact of climate and environmental variability and change on ocean ecosystems and the biodiversity they support.<br/>\n<br/>\nScale factor and offset are already applied.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Citations</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nNASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Ocean Ecology Laboratory, Ocean Biology Processing Group. Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Aqua Ocean Color Data, NASA OB.DAAC, Greenbelt, MD, USA.<br/>",
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2025
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"schema": {}
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2026
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},
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2027
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"public-global-chlorophyl-min": {
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2028
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"name": "Chlorophyll-a concentration",
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2029
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"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring.<br/>\n<br/>\nChlorophyll-a concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived.<br/>\n<br/>\nScientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Source</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nThis level 3 product includes ocean color and satellite ocean biology data produced or collected under EOSDIS - https://earthdata.nasa.gov/about.<br/>\n<br/>\nThis dataset may be used for studying the biology and hydrology of coastal zones, changes in the diversity and geographical distribution of coastal marine habitats, biogeochemical fluxes and their influence in Earth's oceans and climate over time, and finally the impact of climate and environmental variability and change on ocean ecosystems and the biodiversity they support.<br/>\n<br/>\nScale factor and offset are already applied.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Citations</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nNASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Ocean Ecology Laboratory, Ocean Biology Processing Group. Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Aqua Ocean Color Data, NASA OB.DAAC, Greenbelt, MD, USA.<br/>",
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"schema": {}
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2031
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},
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2022
2032
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"public-global-chlorophyl": {
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2023
2033
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"name": "Chlorophyll-a concentration",
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2024
2034
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"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring.<br/>\n<br/>\nChlorophyll-a concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived.<br/>\n<br/>\nScientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Source</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nThis level 3 product includes ocean color and satellite ocean biology data produced or collected under EOSDIS - https://earthdata.nasa.gov/about.<br/>\n<br/>\nThis dataset may be used for studying the biology and hydrology of coastal zones, changes in the diversity and geographical distribution of coastal marine habitats, biogeochemical fluxes and their influence in Earth's oceans and climate over time, and finally the impact of climate and environmental variability and change on ocean ecosystems and the biodiversity they support.<br/>\n<br/>\nScale factor and offset are already applied.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Citations</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nNASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Ocean Ecology Laboratory, Ocean Biology Processing Group. Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Aqua Ocean Color Data, NASA OB.DAAC, Greenbelt, MD, USA.<br/>",
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@@ -2402,11 +2412,31 @@
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"timestamp": "timestamp"
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}
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},
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2415
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"public-global-water-salinity-max": {
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2416
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"name": "Salinity",
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"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses.<br/>\n<br/>\nGlobal circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of large-scale circulation, known as “thermohaline” circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa.<br/>\n<br/>\nThis thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Source</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nThe Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels.<br/>\n<br/>\nThe HYCOM Consortium, which includes the National Ocean Partnership Program (NOPP), is part of the U.S. Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE).<br/>\n<br/>\nFunded by the National Ocean Partnership Program, the Office of Naval Research (ONR), and DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Citations</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nJ. A. Cummings and O. M. Smedstad. 2013: Variational Data Assimilation for the Global Ocean. Data Assimilation for Atmospheric, Oceanic and Hydrologic Applications vol II, chapter 13, 303-343.<br/>",
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"schema": {}
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},
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"public-global-water-salinity-min": {
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"name": "Salinity",
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"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses.<br/>\n<br/>\nGlobal circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of large-scale circulation, known as “thermohaline” circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa.<br/>\n<br/>\nThis thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Source</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nThe Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels.<br/>\n<br/>\nThe HYCOM Consortium, which includes the National Ocean Partnership Program (NOPP), is part of the U.S. Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE).<br/>\n<br/>\nFunded by the National Ocean Partnership Program, the Office of Naval Research (ONR), and DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Citations</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nJ. A. Cummings and O. M. Smedstad. 2013: Variational Data Assimilation for the Global Ocean. Data Assimilation for Atmospheric, Oceanic and Hydrologic Applications vol II, chapter 13, 303-343.<br/>",
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"schema": {}
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},
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"public-global-water-salinity": {
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"name": "Salinity",
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"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses.<br/>\n<br/>\nGlobal circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of large-scale circulation, known as “thermohaline” circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa.<br/>\n<br/>\nThis thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Source</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nThe Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels.<br/>\n<br/>\nThe HYCOM Consortium, which includes the National Ocean Partnership Program (NOPP), is part of the U.S. Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE).<br/>\n<br/>\nFunded by the National Ocean Partnership Program, the Office of Naval Research (ONR), and DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Citations</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nJ. A. Cummings and O. M. Smedstad. 2013: Variational Data Assimilation for the Global Ocean. Data Assimilation for Atmospheric, Oceanic and Hydrologic Applications vol II, chapter 13, 303-343.<br/>",
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"schema": {}
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},
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"public-global-water-temperature-max": {
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"name": "Sea surface temperature",
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"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at or near the surface of the ocean. Sea surface temperature impacts weather and regional climates. Temperature and salinity drive global ocean circulation and large-scale movement of ocean currents.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Source</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nThe Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels.<br/>\n<br/>\nThe HYCOM Consortium, which includes the National Ocean Partnership Program (NOPP), is part of the U.S. Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE).<br/>\n<br/>\nFunded by the National Ocean Partnership Program, the Office of Naval Research (ONR), and DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Citations</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nJ. A. Cummings and O. M. Smedstad. 2013: Variational Data Assimilation for the Global Ocean. Data Assimilation for Atmospheric, Oceanic and Hydrologic Applications vol II, chapter 13, 303-343.<br/>",
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"schema": {}
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},
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"public-global-water-temperature-min": {
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"name": "Sea surface temperature",
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"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at or near the surface of the ocean. Sea surface temperature impacts weather and regional climates. Temperature and salinity drive global ocean circulation and large-scale movement of ocean currents.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Source</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nThe Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels.<br/>\n<br/>\nThe HYCOM Consortium, which includes the National Ocean Partnership Program (NOPP), is part of the U.S. Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE).<br/>\n<br/>\nFunded by the National Ocean Partnership Program, the Office of Naval Research (ONR), and DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Citations</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nJ. A. Cummings and O. M. Smedstad. 2013: Variational Data Assimilation for the Global Ocean. Data Assimilation for Atmospheric, Oceanic and Hydrologic Applications vol II, chapter 13, 303-343.<br/>",
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"schema": {}
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},
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"public-global-water-temperature": {
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"name": "Sea surface temperature",
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"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at or near the surface of the ocean. Sea surface temperature impacts weather and regional climates. Temperature and salinity drive global ocean circulation and large-scale movement of ocean currents.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Source</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nThe Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels.<br/>\n<br/>\nThe HYCOM Consortium, which includes the National Ocean Partnership Program (NOPP), is part of the U.S. Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE).<br/>\n<br/>\nFunded by the National Ocean Partnership Program, the Office of Naval Research (ONR), and DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program.<br/>\n<br/>\n<strong>Citations</strong><br/>\n<br/>\nJ. A. Cummings and O. M. Smedstad. 2013: Variational Data Assimilation for the Global Ocean. Data Assimilation for Atmospheric, Oceanic and Hydrologic Applications vol II, chapter 13, 303-343.<br/>",
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}
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},
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"public-panama-vessel-identity-fishing": {
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"name": "Panama VMS (Public
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"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama
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"name": "Panama VMS (Public Fishing Vessels)",
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"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Public)",
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"schema": {
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"id": "id",
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"selfReportedInfo": "selfReportedInfo",
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package/es/datasets.json
CHANGED
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@@ -2019,6 +2019,16 @@
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2019
2019
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"firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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2020
2020
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}
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2021
2021
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},
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2022
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"public-global-chlorophyl-max": {
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"name": "Concentración de clorofila-a",
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2024
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"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
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"schema": {}
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},
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"public-global-chlorophyl-min": {
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"name": "Concentración de clorofila-a",
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2029
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"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
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"schema": {}
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},
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"public-global-chlorophyl": {
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"name": "Concentración de clorofila-a",
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"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
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"timestamp": "timestamp"
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}
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},
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"public-global-water-salinity-max": {
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"name": "Salinidad",
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"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
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"schema": {}
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},
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"public-global-water-salinity-min": {
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"name": "Salinidad",
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"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
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"schema": {}
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},
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"public-global-water-salinity": {
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"name": "Salinidad",
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"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
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"schema": {}
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},
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"public-global-water-temperature-max": {
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"name": "Temperatura de la superficie del mar",
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"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
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|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2434
|
+
},
|
|
2435
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-min": {
|
|
2436
|
+
"name": "Temperatura de la superficie del mar",
|
|
2437
|
+
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
2438
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2439
|
+
},
|
|
2410
2440
|
"public-global-water-temperature": {
|
|
2411
2441
|
"name": "Temperatura de la superficie del mar",
|
|
2412
2442
|
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
@@ -2844,8 +2874,8 @@
|
|
|
2844
2874
|
}
|
|
2845
2875
|
},
|
|
2846
2876
|
"public-panama-vessel-identity-fishing": {
|
|
2847
|
-
"name": "Panama VMS (Public
|
|
2848
|
-
"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama
|
|
2877
|
+
"name": "Panama VMS (Public Fishing Vessels)",
|
|
2878
|
+
"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Public)",
|
|
2849
2879
|
"schema": {
|
|
2850
2880
|
"id": "id",
|
|
2851
2881
|
"selfReportedInfo": "selfReportedInfo",
|
package/fr/datasets.json
CHANGED
|
@@ -2019,6 +2019,16 @@
|
|
|
2019
2019
|
"firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
|
|
2020
2020
|
}
|
|
2021
2021
|
},
|
|
2022
|
+
"public-global-chlorophyl-max": {
|
|
2023
|
+
"name": "Concentration en chloriphylle a",
|
|
2024
|
+
"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
|
|
2025
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2026
|
+
},
|
|
2027
|
+
"public-global-chlorophyl-min": {
|
|
2028
|
+
"name": "Concentration en chloriphylle a",
|
|
2029
|
+
"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
|
|
2030
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2031
|
+
},
|
|
2022
2032
|
"public-global-chlorophyl": {
|
|
2023
2033
|
"name": "Concentration en chloriphylle a",
|
|
2024
2034
|
"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
|
|
@@ -2402,11 +2412,31 @@
|
|
|
2402
2412
|
"timestamp": "timestamp"
|
|
2403
2413
|
}
|
|
2404
2414
|
},
|
|
2415
|
+
"public-global-water-salinity-max": {
|
|
2416
|
+
"name": "Salinité",
|
|
2417
|
+
"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
|
|
2418
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2419
|
+
},
|
|
2420
|
+
"public-global-water-salinity-min": {
|
|
2421
|
+
"name": "Salinité",
|
|
2422
|
+
"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
|
|
2423
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2424
|
+
},
|
|
2405
2425
|
"public-global-water-salinity": {
|
|
2406
2426
|
"name": "Salinité",
|
|
2407
2427
|
"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
|
|
2408
2428
|
"schema": {}
|
|
2409
2429
|
},
|
|
2430
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-max": {
|
|
2431
|
+
"name": "Températiure de la surface de la mer",
|
|
2432
|
+
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
2433
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2434
|
+
},
|
|
2435
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-min": {
|
|
2436
|
+
"name": "Températiure de la surface de la mer",
|
|
2437
|
+
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
2438
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2439
|
+
},
|
|
2410
2440
|
"public-global-water-temperature": {
|
|
2411
2441
|
"name": "Températiure de la surface de la mer",
|
|
2412
2442
|
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
@@ -2844,8 +2874,8 @@
|
|
|
2844
2874
|
}
|
|
2845
2875
|
},
|
|
2846
2876
|
"public-panama-vessel-identity-fishing": {
|
|
2847
|
-
"name": "Panama VMS (Public
|
|
2848
|
-
"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama
|
|
2877
|
+
"name": "Panama VMS (Public Fishing Vessels)",
|
|
2878
|
+
"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Public)",
|
|
2849
2879
|
"schema": {
|
|
2850
2880
|
"id": "id",
|
|
2851
2881
|
"selfReportedInfo": "selfReportedInfo",
|
package/id/datasets.json
CHANGED
|
@@ -2019,6 +2019,16 @@
|
|
|
2019
2019
|
"firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
|
|
2020
2020
|
}
|
|
2021
2021
|
},
|
|
2022
|
+
"public-global-chlorophyl-max": {
|
|
2023
|
+
"name": "dan Konsentrasi Klorofil-a",
|
|
2024
|
+
"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
|
|
2025
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2026
|
+
},
|
|
2027
|
+
"public-global-chlorophyl-min": {
|
|
2028
|
+
"name": "dan Konsentrasi Klorofil-a",
|
|
2029
|
+
"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
|
|
2030
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2031
|
+
},
|
|
2022
2032
|
"public-global-chlorophyl": {
|
|
2023
2033
|
"name": "dan Konsentrasi Klorofil-a",
|
|
2024
2034
|
"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
|
|
@@ -2402,11 +2412,31 @@
|
|
|
2402
2412
|
"timestamp": "timestamp"
|
|
2403
2413
|
}
|
|
2404
2414
|
},
|
|
2415
|
+
"public-global-water-salinity-max": {
|
|
2416
|
+
"name": "Salinitas",
|
|
2417
|
+
"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
|
|
2418
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2419
|
+
},
|
|
2420
|
+
"public-global-water-salinity-min": {
|
|
2421
|
+
"name": "Salinitas",
|
|
2422
|
+
"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
|
|
2423
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2424
|
+
},
|
|
2405
2425
|
"public-global-water-salinity": {
|
|
2406
2426
|
"name": "Salinitas",
|
|
2407
2427
|
"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
|
|
2408
2428
|
"schema": {}
|
|
2409
2429
|
},
|
|
2430
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-max": {
|
|
2431
|
+
"name": "Suhu permukaan laut",
|
|
2432
|
+
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
2433
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2434
|
+
},
|
|
2435
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-min": {
|
|
2436
|
+
"name": "Suhu permukaan laut",
|
|
2437
|
+
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
2438
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2439
|
+
},
|
|
2410
2440
|
"public-global-water-temperature": {
|
|
2411
2441
|
"name": "Suhu permukaan laut",
|
|
2412
2442
|
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
@@ -2844,8 +2874,8 @@
|
|
|
2844
2874
|
}
|
|
2845
2875
|
},
|
|
2846
2876
|
"public-panama-vessel-identity-fishing": {
|
|
2847
|
-
"name": "Panama VMS (Public
|
|
2848
|
-
"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama
|
|
2877
|
+
"name": "Panama VMS (Public Fishing Vessels)",
|
|
2878
|
+
"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Public)",
|
|
2849
2879
|
"schema": {
|
|
2850
2880
|
"id": "id",
|
|
2851
2881
|
"selfReportedInfo": "selfReportedInfo",
|
package/package.json
CHANGED
package/pt/datasets.json
CHANGED
|
@@ -2019,6 +2019,16 @@
|
|
|
2019
2019
|
"firstTransmissionDate": "primeira data de transmissão"
|
|
2020
2020
|
}
|
|
2021
2021
|
},
|
|
2022
|
+
"public-global-chlorophyl-max": {
|
|
2023
|
+
"name": "Concentração de clorofila-a",
|
|
2024
|
+
"description": "Clorofila é o pigmento encontrado em todas as plantas fotossintéticas. A sua concentração no oceano é utilizada como um índice da biomassa fitoplanctônica e, como tal, é um elemento fundamental para os modelos de produtividade primária. O instrumento moderado de resolução que imagina o espectro (MODIS) a bordo dos satélites Terra e de Aqua da NASA mede a cor do oceano todos os dias, da qual as concentrações globais de clorofila-a são derivadas. o fitoplâncton oceaânico fixa quimicamente o carbono através da fotossíntese, absorvendo dióxido de carbono dissolvido e produzindo oxigênio. Através deste processo, as plantas marinhas capturam uma quantidade igual de carbono do que a fotossíntese por vegetação terrestre. Mudanças na quantidade de fittoplâncton indicam a mudança na produtividade dos oceanos e fornecem uma ligação oceânica fundamental para o acompanhamento global das alterações climáticas. Os cientistas utilizam a clorofila na modelagem dos ciclos biogeoquímicos da Terra, como o ciclo do carbono ou o ciclo do nitrogênio. Além disso, em curto período, a clorofila pode ser usada para rastrear correntes oceanográficas, jatos e plumas estuarinas. A resolução de 1 quilômetro e cobertura global quase diária dos dados MODIS, permite assim que os cientistas observem características oceanográficas de mesoescala em ambientes costeiros e estuarinos, que são cada vez mais importantes nos estudos das ciências marinhas. Fonte: Observações à Terra da NASA.",
|
|
2025
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2026
|
+
},
|
|
2027
|
+
"public-global-chlorophyl-min": {
|
|
2028
|
+
"name": "Concentração de clorofila-a",
|
|
2029
|
+
"description": "Clorofila é o pigmento encontrado em todas as plantas fotossintéticas. A sua concentração no oceano é utilizada como um índice da biomassa fitoplanctônica e, como tal, é um elemento fundamental para os modelos de produtividade primária. O instrumento moderado de resolução que imagina o espectro (MODIS) a bordo dos satélites Terra e de Aqua da NASA mede a cor do oceano todos os dias, da qual as concentrações globais de clorofila-a são derivadas. o fitoplâncton oceaânico fixa quimicamente o carbono através da fotossíntese, absorvendo dióxido de carbono dissolvido e produzindo oxigênio. Através deste processo, as plantas marinhas capturam uma quantidade igual de carbono do que a fotossíntese por vegetação terrestre. Mudanças na quantidade de fittoplâncton indicam a mudança na produtividade dos oceanos e fornecem uma ligação oceânica fundamental para o acompanhamento global das alterações climáticas. Os cientistas utilizam a clorofila na modelagem dos ciclos biogeoquímicos da Terra, como o ciclo do carbono ou o ciclo do nitrogênio. Além disso, em curto período, a clorofila pode ser usada para rastrear correntes oceanográficas, jatos e plumas estuarinas. A resolução de 1 quilômetro e cobertura global quase diária dos dados MODIS, permite assim que os cientistas observem características oceanográficas de mesoescala em ambientes costeiros e estuarinos, que são cada vez mais importantes nos estudos das ciências marinhas. Fonte: Observações à Terra da NASA.",
|
|
2030
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2031
|
+
},
|
|
2022
2032
|
"public-global-chlorophyl": {
|
|
2023
2033
|
"name": "Concentração de clorofila-a",
|
|
2024
2034
|
"description": "Clorofila é o pigmento encontrado em todas as plantas fotossintéticas. A sua concentração no oceano é utilizada como um índice da biomassa fitoplanctônica e, como tal, é um elemento fundamental para os modelos de produtividade primária. O instrumento moderado de resolução que imagina o espectro (MODIS) a bordo dos satélites Terra e de Aqua da NASA mede a cor do oceano todos os dias, da qual as concentrações globais de clorofila-a são derivadas. o fitoplâncton oceaânico fixa quimicamente o carbono através da fotossíntese, absorvendo dióxido de carbono dissolvido e produzindo oxigênio. Através deste processo, as plantas marinhas capturam uma quantidade igual de carbono do que a fotossíntese por vegetação terrestre. Mudanças na quantidade de fittoplâncton indicam a mudança na produtividade dos oceanos e fornecem uma ligação oceânica fundamental para o acompanhamento global das alterações climáticas. Os cientistas utilizam a clorofila na modelagem dos ciclos biogeoquímicos da Terra, como o ciclo do carbono ou o ciclo do nitrogênio. Além disso, em curto período, a clorofila pode ser usada para rastrear correntes oceanográficas, jatos e plumas estuarinas. A resolução de 1 quilômetro e cobertura global quase diária dos dados MODIS, permite assim que os cientistas observem características oceanográficas de mesoescala em ambientes costeiros e estuarinos, que são cada vez mais importantes nos estudos das ciências marinhas. Fonte: Observações à Terra da NASA.",
|
|
@@ -2402,11 +2412,31 @@
|
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|
"timestamp": "timestamp"
|
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2413
|
}
|
|
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2414
|
},
|
|
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|
+
"public-global-water-salinity-max": {
|
|
2416
|
+
"name": "Salinidade",
|
|
2417
|
+
"description": "A salinidade de superfície do mar é um parâmetro fundamental para estimar a influência dos oceanos no clima. Assim como a temperatura, a salinidade é um fator fundamental que determina a densidade da água oceânica e influencia, assim, o afundamento e o ressurgimento de massas de água. A circulação termohalina ocorre em todos os oceanos entre a superfície e o fundo, impulsionada pela temperatura e pela salinidade. A circulação termohalina global é um modelo simples de circulação em grande escala. As águas profundas formadas no Atlântico Norte, se movem para sul, circulam em torno da Antárctica e finalmente entram nas bacias do Atlântico Índico, Pacífico e Atlântico. Correntes trazem massa de água fria do norte ao sul e vice-versa. Esta circulação termohalina tem grande influência na formação de gelo marinho nos polos, e transporta fontes de alimentos oceânicos e a vida marinha em todo o planeta, além de afetar padrões de chuva, padrões de vento, furacões e monsões. Fonte: Informações sobre o Serviço Marinho da UE.",
|
|
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|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
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|
+
},
|
|
2420
|
+
"public-global-water-salinity-min": {
|
|
2421
|
+
"name": "Salinidade",
|
|
2422
|
+
"description": "A salinidade de superfície do mar é um parâmetro fundamental para estimar a influência dos oceanos no clima. Assim como a temperatura, a salinidade é um fator fundamental que determina a densidade da água oceânica e influencia, assim, o afundamento e o ressurgimento de massas de água. A circulação termohalina ocorre em todos os oceanos entre a superfície e o fundo, impulsionada pela temperatura e pela salinidade. A circulação termohalina global é um modelo simples de circulação em grande escala. As águas profundas formadas no Atlântico Norte, se movem para sul, circulam em torno da Antárctica e finalmente entram nas bacias do Atlântico Índico, Pacífico e Atlântico. Correntes trazem massa de água fria do norte ao sul e vice-versa. Esta circulação termohalina tem grande influência na formação de gelo marinho nos polos, e transporta fontes de alimentos oceânicos e a vida marinha em todo o planeta, além de afetar padrões de chuva, padrões de vento, furacões e monsões. Fonte: Informações sobre o Serviço Marinho da UE.",
|
|
2423
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2424
|
+
},
|
|
2405
2425
|
"public-global-water-salinity": {
|
|
2406
2426
|
"name": "Salinidade",
|
|
2407
2427
|
"description": "A salinidade de superfície do mar é um parâmetro fundamental para estimar a influência dos oceanos no clima. Assim como a temperatura, a salinidade é um fator fundamental que determina a densidade da água oceânica e influencia, assim, o afundamento e o ressurgimento de massas de água. A circulação termohalina ocorre em todos os oceanos entre a superfície e o fundo, impulsionada pela temperatura e pela salinidade. A circulação termohalina global é um modelo simples de circulação em grande escala. As águas profundas formadas no Atlântico Norte, se movem para sul, circulam em torno da Antárctica e finalmente entram nas bacias do Atlântico Índico, Pacífico e Atlântico. Correntes trazem massa de água fria do norte ao sul e vice-versa. Esta circulação termohalina tem grande influência na formação de gelo marinho nos polos, e transporta fontes de alimentos oceânicos e a vida marinha em todo o planeta, além de afetar padrões de chuva, padrões de vento, furacões e monsões. Fonte: Informações sobre o Serviço Marinho da UE.",
|
|
2408
2428
|
"schema": {}
|
|
2409
2429
|
},
|
|
2430
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-max": {
|
|
2431
|
+
"name": "Temperatura da superfície do mar",
|
|
2432
|
+
"description": "A temperatura da superfície do mar é a temperatura da água na superfície do oceano. O Modelo de Oceano Coordenado Híbrido (HYCOM) é um modelo de coordenadas oceânicas híbrido de dados análoga à pressão híbrida isopycnal-sigma (generalizado). O subconjunto de dados HYCOM hospedados na EE contém as variáveis salinidade, temperatura, velocidade vetorial e altitude. Eles foram interpolados para uma grade uniforme de 0,08 graus de lato/longo entre 70,48°S e 85,48°N. A salinidade, a temperatura e as variáveis de velocidade vetorial foram interpoladas para 40 níveis z-padrão. Fonte: HYCOM",
|
|
2433
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2434
|
+
},
|
|
2435
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-min": {
|
|
2436
|
+
"name": "Temperatura da superfície do mar",
|
|
2437
|
+
"description": "A temperatura da superfície do mar é a temperatura da água na superfície do oceano. O Modelo de Oceano Coordenado Híbrido (HYCOM) é um modelo de coordenadas oceânicas híbrido de dados análoga à pressão híbrida isopycnal-sigma (generalizado). O subconjunto de dados HYCOM hospedados na EE contém as variáveis salinidade, temperatura, velocidade vetorial e altitude. Eles foram interpolados para uma grade uniforme de 0,08 graus de lato/longo entre 70,48°S e 85,48°N. A salinidade, a temperatura e as variáveis de velocidade vetorial foram interpoladas para 40 níveis z-padrão. Fonte: HYCOM",
|
|
2438
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2439
|
+
},
|
|
2410
2440
|
"public-global-water-temperature": {
|
|
2411
2441
|
"name": "Temperatura da superfície do mar",
|
|
2412
2442
|
"description": "A temperatura da superfície do mar é a temperatura da água na superfície do oceano. O Modelo de Oceano Coordenado Híbrido (HYCOM) é um modelo de coordenadas oceânicas híbrido de dados análoga à pressão híbrida isopycnal-sigma (generalizado). O subconjunto de dados HYCOM hospedados na EE contém as variáveis salinidade, temperatura, velocidade vetorial e altitude. Eles foram interpolados para uma grade uniforme de 0,08 graus de lato/longo entre 70,48°S e 85,48°N. A salinidade, a temperatura e as variáveis de velocidade vetorial foram interpoladas para 40 níveis z-padrão. Fonte: HYCOM",
|
|
@@ -2844,8 +2874,8 @@
|
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|
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|
}
|
|
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2875
|
},
|
|
2846
2876
|
"public-panama-vessel-identity-fishing": {
|
|
2847
|
-
"name": "Panama VMS (Public
|
|
2848
|
-
"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama
|
|
2877
|
+
"name": "Panama VMS (Public Fishing Vessels)",
|
|
2878
|
+
"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Public)",
|
|
2849
2879
|
"schema": {
|
|
2850
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|
"id": "id",
|
|
2851
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|
"selfReportedInfo": "selfReportedInfo",
|
package/source/datasets.json
CHANGED
|
@@ -2019,6 +2019,16 @@
|
|
|
2019
2019
|
"firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
|
|
2020
2020
|
}
|
|
2021
2021
|
},
|
|
2022
|
+
"public-global-chlorophyl-max": {
|
|
2023
|
+
"name": "Chlorophyll-a concentration",
|
|
2024
|
+
"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
|
|
2025
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2026
|
+
},
|
|
2027
|
+
"public-global-chlorophyl-min": {
|
|
2028
|
+
"name": "Chlorophyll-a concentration",
|
|
2029
|
+
"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
|
|
2030
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2031
|
+
},
|
|
2022
2032
|
"public-global-chlorophyl": {
|
|
2023
2033
|
"name": "Chlorophyll-a concentration",
|
|
2024
2034
|
"description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
|
|
@@ -2402,11 +2412,31 @@
|
|
|
2402
2412
|
"timestamp": "timestamp"
|
|
2403
2413
|
}
|
|
2404
2414
|
},
|
|
2415
|
+
"public-global-water-salinity-max": {
|
|
2416
|
+
"name": "Global Salinity",
|
|
2417
|
+
"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
|
|
2418
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2419
|
+
},
|
|
2420
|
+
"public-global-water-salinity-min": {
|
|
2421
|
+
"name": "Global Salinity",
|
|
2422
|
+
"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
|
|
2423
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2424
|
+
},
|
|
2405
2425
|
"public-global-water-salinity": {
|
|
2406
2426
|
"name": "Global Salinity",
|
|
2407
2427
|
"description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
|
|
2408
2428
|
"schema": {}
|
|
2409
2429
|
},
|
|
2430
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-max": {
|
|
2431
|
+
"name": "Sea surface temperature",
|
|
2432
|
+
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
2433
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2434
|
+
},
|
|
2435
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-min": {
|
|
2436
|
+
"name": "Sea surface temperature",
|
|
2437
|
+
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
2438
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2439
|
+
},
|
|
2410
2440
|
"public-global-water-temperature": {
|
|
2411
2441
|
"name": "Sea surface temperature",
|
|
2412
2442
|
"description": "Sea surface temperature is the water temperature at the ocean's surface. The Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is a data-assimilative hybrid isopycnal-sigma-pressure (generalized) coordinate ocean model. The subset of HYCOM data hosted in EE contains the variables salinity, temperature, velocity, and elevation. They have been interpolated to a uniform 0.08 degree lat/long grid between 80.48°S and 80.48°N. The salinity, temperature, and velocity variables have been interpolated to 40 standard z-levels. Source: HYCOM",
|
|
@@ -2844,8 +2874,8 @@
|
|
|
2844
2874
|
}
|
|
2845
2875
|
},
|
|
2846
2876
|
"public-panama-vessel-identity-fishing": {
|
|
2847
|
-
"name": "Panama VMS (Public
|
|
2848
|
-
"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama
|
|
2877
|
+
"name": "Panama VMS (Public Fishing Vessels)",
|
|
2878
|
+
"description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Public)",
|
|
2849
2879
|
"schema": {
|
|
2850
2880
|
"id": "id",
|
|
2851
2881
|
"selfReportedInfo": "selfReportedInfo",
|
package/val/datasets.json
CHANGED
|
@@ -2019,6 +2019,16 @@
|
|
|
2019
2019
|
"firstTransmissionDate": "crwdns66203:0crwdne66203:0"
|
|
2020
2020
|
}
|
|
2021
2021
|
},
|
|
2022
|
+
"public-global-chlorophyl-max": {
|
|
2023
|
+
"name": "crwdns70240:0crwdne70240:0",
|
|
2024
|
+
"description": "crwdns70242:0crwdne70242:0",
|
|
2025
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2026
|
+
},
|
|
2027
|
+
"public-global-chlorophyl-min": {
|
|
2028
|
+
"name": "crwdns70244:0crwdne70244:0",
|
|
2029
|
+
"description": "crwdns70246:0crwdne70246:0",
|
|
2030
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2031
|
+
},
|
|
2022
2032
|
"public-global-chlorophyl": {
|
|
2023
2033
|
"name": "crwdns66205:0crwdne66205:0",
|
|
2024
2034
|
"description": "crwdns66207:0crwdne66207:0",
|
|
@@ -2402,11 +2412,31 @@
|
|
|
2402
2412
|
"timestamp": "crwdns66599:0crwdne66599:0"
|
|
2403
2413
|
}
|
|
2404
2414
|
},
|
|
2415
|
+
"public-global-water-salinity-max": {
|
|
2416
|
+
"name": "crwdns70248:0crwdne70248:0",
|
|
2417
|
+
"description": "crwdns70250:0crwdne70250:0",
|
|
2418
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2419
|
+
},
|
|
2420
|
+
"public-global-water-salinity-min": {
|
|
2421
|
+
"name": "crwdns70252:0crwdne70252:0",
|
|
2422
|
+
"description": "crwdns70254:0crwdne70254:0",
|
|
2423
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2424
|
+
},
|
|
2405
2425
|
"public-global-water-salinity": {
|
|
2406
2426
|
"name": "crwdns66601:0crwdne66601:0",
|
|
2407
2427
|
"description": "crwdns66603:0crwdne66603:0",
|
|
2408
2428
|
"schema": {}
|
|
2409
2429
|
},
|
|
2430
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-max": {
|
|
2431
|
+
"name": "crwdns70256:0crwdne70256:0",
|
|
2432
|
+
"description": "crwdns70258:0crwdne70258:0",
|
|
2433
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2434
|
+
},
|
|
2435
|
+
"public-global-water-temperature-min": {
|
|
2436
|
+
"name": "crwdns70260:0crwdne70260:0",
|
|
2437
|
+
"description": "crwdns70262:0crwdne70262:0",
|
|
2438
|
+
"schema": {}
|
|
2439
|
+
},
|
|
2410
2440
|
"public-global-water-temperature": {
|
|
2411
2441
|
"name": "crwdns66605:0crwdne66605:0",
|
|
2412
2442
|
"description": "crwdns66607:0crwdne66607:0",
|
|
@@ -2844,8 +2874,8 @@
|
|
|
2844
2874
|
}
|
|
2845
2875
|
},
|
|
2846
2876
|
"public-panama-vessel-identity-fishing": {
|
|
2847
|
-
"name": "
|
|
2848
|
-
"description": "
|
|
2877
|
+
"name": "crwdns70264:0crwdne70264:0",
|
|
2878
|
+
"description": "crwdns70266:0crwdne70266:0",
|
|
2849
2879
|
"schema": {
|
|
2850
2880
|
"id": "crwdns69176:0crwdne69176:0",
|
|
2851
2881
|
"selfReportedInfo": "crwdns69178:0crwdne69178:0",
|