This is a test site. The production site with full data is available at GBIF.org
{{nav.loginGreeting}}
  • Obter dados
      • Ocorrências
      • GBIF API
      • Espécies
      • Conjuntos de dados
      • Occurrence snapshots
      • Hosted portals
      • Tendências
  • How-to
    • Partilhar

      • Quick-start guide
      • Tipos de conjuntos de dados
      • Alojamento dos dados
      • Padrões
      • Tornar-se um publicador
      • Qualidade de dados
      • Artigos de dados
    • Use data

      • Uso de dados destacado
      • Guia de citação
      • GBIF citations
      • Citation widget
      • Guides and documentation
  • Ferramentas
    • Publicadores

      • IPT
      • Validador de dados
      • GeoPick
      • New data model
      • GRSciColl
      • Sugerir um conjunto de dados
      • Metabarcoding data toolkit
    • Utilizadores

      • Hosted portals
      • Scientific collections
      • Processamento de dados
      • Derived datasets
      • rgbif
      • pygbif
      • MAXENT
      • Catálogo de ferramentas
    • GBIF Labs

      • Species matching
      • Name parser
      • Sequence ID
      • Tendências de observações relativas
      • Blog de programadores
  • Comunidade
    • Network

      • A rede GBIF
      • Nodes
      • Publicadores
      • Network contacts
      • Fórum da comunidade
      • uma aliança para o conhecimento da biodiversidade
    • Volunteers

      • Mentors
      • Ambassadors
      • Tradutores
      • Ciência cidadã
    • Activities

      • Capacity development
      • Programas e projetos
      • Training and learning resources
      • Data Use Club
      • Living Atlases
  • About
    • Por dentro do GBIF

      • O que é o GBIF?
      • Tornar-se membro
      • Governança
      • Strategic framework
      • Programa de trabalho
      • Financiadores
      • Parcerias
      • Notas da versão
      • Contactos
    • Notícias e divulgação

      • Notícias
      • Boletins informativos e listas
      • Eventos
      • Prémios
      • Science Review
      • Uso dos dados
      • Thematic communities
  • User profile

Freshwater samples in MZNA-INV-FRW: Macroinvertebrate samples from the water quality monitoring network along the Ebro Basin

Dataset homepage

Citation

Museum of Zoology, University of Navarra M, Escribano N, Control del Estado de las Masas de Agua Superficiales, Oscoz J (2021). Freshwater samples in MZNA-INV-FRW: Macroinvertebrate samples from the water quality monitoring network along the Ebro Basin. Version 2.9. University of Navarra – Department of Environmental Biology. Sampling event dataset https://doi.org/10.15470/gkiznu accessed via GBIF.org on 2025-06-20.

Description

This dataset gathers information about the macroinvertebrate samples collected on rivers and streams of the Ebro River Basin (NE Iberian Peninsula), the second largest catchment in the Iberian Peninsula. The aim was to use freshwater macroinvertebrates to calculate the biological indices required to evaluate the ecological status of the open water bodies within this basin. This dataset is a part of a monitoring network set up by the Confederación Hidrográfica del Ebro (hereinafter CHE). This network was established to fulfill the requirements of the European Water Framework Directive (hereinafter WFD).

The collection is composed of 1776 sampling events carried out between 2005 and 2015 at more than 400 sampling sites. Environmental variables at each sampling site were also recorded to characterise the habitat, and can be found in the MeasurementOrFacts extension (eMoF) uploaded along with the sampling event dataset. All measurements were obtained from the CHE portal (CHE, 2017).

The Museum of Zoology of the University of Navarra (hereinafter MZNA) curates the material obtained during these samplings. Samples were qualitatively screened for all occurring taxa, and all individuals from all taxa in a quantitative subsample of each sample were counted. Biological indices were calculated to estimate water quality at each sampling site. An occurrence extension is also available gathering the abundance of each taxon within the dataset.

Purpose

The aim of the present dataset is to provide all information from the CEMAS project conducted in the Ebro River Basin from 2005 to 2015.

Sampling Description

Study Extent

The Ebro River Basin is situated in the Northeast of the Spain (Western Europe) and drains an area of 85.362 km2. It is the second largest catchment in the Iberian Peninsula and has 702 tributaries and 110 lakes. from the western Pyrenees to the south of the Iberian Mountains, discharging into the Mediterranean Sea. The prevailing climate of the basin is Mediterranean with an average yearly precipitation of 620 mm. The basin hosts a large number of ecosystems from the head of the Ebro River to its mouth. Eurosiberian communities (beech, grasslands) dominate the highest part of the river whereas Mediterranean ones take over in the middle region until the mouth. The water uses of the basin are principally urban water supply, livestock, farming, and industry. However, the highest water consumption comes from agriculture (4,574 hm3/year) dedicated to 906,000 ha of irrigated crops. Samplings were carried out annually from late spring to early autumn when macroinvertebrate communities reach their highest diversity, although samplings could be postponed to summer in the case of unfavorable environmental conditions such as high rainfall in elevated areas (e.g., the Pyrenees). Likewise, in the event of floods, samplings were conducted 15 days after the incident.Temporary streams were sampled when the conditions were optimal, that is, in the presence of running water. A total of 473 sampling sites belonging to the CEMAS network were sampled from 2005 to 2015. Each sampling site covered a selected 100-m segment of the river having the essential habitats of that river’s stretch. Therefore, all the data obtained was assumed to be representative of that stretch of the river, and all variety of habitats were sampled. The following features were taken into account for selecting a segment: •The presence of rapid-slow running water. •Fluvial Morphology. For example, natural courses were chosen over channeled water. •Vegetation cover. Shady areas were avoided if they were not characteristic of the stretch. •Areas near bridges and weirs were avoided unless they were representative of the stretch. •Accessibility. Sampling sites were accessible and crossable.

Sampling

1. Fieldwork At each sampling site, five types of habitats were selected: hard substrates, plant debris, bank bordered by vegetation, submerged macrophytes (if present), sand and other fine sediments. Once identified the microhabitats and the area occupied by each one, the sampling units (kicks) were distributed proportionally to the area of each habitat in the section. As a general rule, twenty sampling units were used. Macroinvertebrates were collected using a hand-net (25 cm x 25 cm aperture, 500-µm-mesh size). In each sampling unit (kick), the substrate was removed 0.5 m in front of the mouth of the net. The final sampled area resulting from the twenty sampling units was approximately 2.5 m2. Samples were fixed in 4% buffered formaldehyde, stored in plastic sealed jars, labeled and brought to the laboratory. Simultaneously, electrical conductivity (precision 1 µS/cm), dissolved oxygen (precision 0.01 mg/L), temperature (precision 0.1°C) and pH were measured using a multi-parameter water quality monitoring system (WTW Multi 340i) at each sampling. Each instrument was calibrated daily during the sampling period. 2. Laboratory work Samples were transported to the laboratory for analysis. The samples were sieved through 5 mm, 1 mm and 0,5 mm mesh sieves. Then, the material was washed with abundant running water, separating the organisms from the remaining debris, gravel, and sand. Finally, the sample was divided into the respective fractions of the sieves: •5mm fraction: all organisms were identified to the taxon level required by the IBMWP index and counted. •1 mm and 0.5 mm fractions: organisms were identified to the taxon level required for the IBMWP index. Samples were divided into subsamples (eg., one-quarter size) and organisms from one subsample were counted.Total abundance of each taxon was estimated from the subsample counts. The remaining sample (eg., the uncounted three-quarters of the sample) was examined for families not caught in the subsample, but organisms were not counted. For further details, see Wrona, Culp & Davies, 1982. •Finally, all the material was stored in plastic jars with 70°ethlyl alcohol, labeled and stored at the MZNA facilities. After processing the samples, the IBMWP and IASPT scores were calculated (Alba-Tercedor, J., P. Jaimez-Cuellar et al., 2002). More details of the sampling protocol can be found in “Protocolo De Muestreo Y Laboratorio De Fauna Bentónica De Invertebrados En Ríos Vadeables” (MAGRAMA, 2013). The environmental variables, the biological indices, and the occurrences can be found in the MeasurementsOrFacts and Occurrence extensions respectively, uploaded together with the Sampling Event dataset.

Quality Control

Specimen identification was carried by Javier Oscoz using suitable literature (Tachet et al., 2000; Oscoz, Galicia & Miranda, 2011). Scientific names were validated according to the GBIF Backbone Taxonomy (GBIF, 2017). All samples were fully analyzed for the entire range of potential taxa. Taxon absences recorded in the dataset are thus true absences as regards to the taxa listed in the IBMWP indices. The MZNA stores samples from 2005 to 2015 derived from the monitoring network. Field data was digitalized and incorporated into the MZNA database (Ariño, 1991). Unique accession numbers were assigned to each sample. The dataset was standardized to the Darwin Core standards. Guidelines by Chapman (2005) were followed to check for taxonomical, geographical and temporal errors in the dataset. Coordinates in UTM/MGRS were transformed to the geographic system. The consistency of all records was inspected by overlapping sampling site coordinates with a map of the Ebro Basin (CHE, 2017). The entire process of debugging the dataset was done with R version 3.3.2 (R Core Team, 2016). Packages used included rgdal (Pebesma, Sumner & Hijmans, 2013), sp (Pebesma & Bivand, 2005) for geographic data and reshape2 (Wickham, 2007) for handling with the dataset.

Method steps

  1. Selection of sampling sites. The list of sampling sites for each year was given by the CHE.
  2. Microhabitat selection at each sampling site.
  3. Measurement of environmental variables including electrical conductivity, water temperature, pH and dissolved oxygen.
  4. Macroinvertebrate sampling by sweeping in the five microhabitats, proportionally to the microhabitat cover. Samples fixed with 4% buffered formaldehyde.
  5. Sampling processing in the laboratory: identification of taxon, count of the number of individuals per taxon and calculation of biotic indices including IBMWP and IASP.
  6. Sample storage in the MZNA facilities.
  7. Digitalization of the data in the MZNA database.
  8. Standardisation of the dataset to Darwin Core standards and publication through the Integrated Publishing Toolkit.

Additional info

The Museum of Zoology (MZNA) was founded in 1980 as a repository of zoological materials originating from research and instructional activities of the Department of Environmental Biology (previously known as the Department of Zoology and Ecology) of the University of Navarra. MZNA stores several million specimens in its climate-controlled facilities. The Museum is a Data Provider for the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) and is an Affiliate of the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN). The Museum is also in charge of the curation and management of the Natural History Collections of the School of Science of the University of Navarra (Spain). MZNA is open to researchers around the world, makes loans and accepts deposits.

Taxonomic Coverages

150 taxa were recorded in the Ebro River Basin belonging to 141 families, 31, orders, 14 classes and 9 phyla.
  1. Annelida
    rank: phylum
  2. Arthropoda
    rank: phylum
  3. Bryozoa
    rank: phylum
  4. Cnidaria
    rank: phylum
  5. Mollusca
    rank: phylum
  6. Nematoda
    rank: phylum
  7. Nematomorpha
    rank: phylum
  8. Platyhelminthes
    rank: phylum
  9. Porifera
    rank: phylum
  10. Arachnida
    rank: class
  11. Bivalvia
    rank: class
  12. Branchiopoda
    rank: class
  13. Clitellata
    rank: class
  14. Demospongiae
    rank: class
  15. Gastropoda
    rank: class
  16. Gordioida
    rank: class
  17. Hydrozoa
    rank: class
  18. Insecta
    rank: class
  19. Malacostraca
    rank: class
  20. Maxillopoda
    rank: class
  21. Ostracoda
    rank: class
  22. Rhabditophora
    rank: class
  23. Amphipoda
    rank: order
  24. Anthoathecatae
    rank: order
  25. Arhynchobdellida
    rank: order
  26. Branchiobdellida
    rank: order
  27. Coleoptera
    rank: order
  28. Collembola
    rank: order
  29. Cycloneritimorpha
    rank: order
  30. Decapoda
    rank: order
  31. Diplostraca
    rank: order
  32. Diptera
    rank: order
  33. Ephemeroptera
    rank: order
  34. Gordioidea
    rank: order
  35. Hemiptera
    rank: order
  36. Hygrophila
    rank: order
  37. Hymenoptera
    rank: order
  38. Lepidoptera
    rank: order
  39. Megaloptera
    rank: order
  40. Isopoda
    rank: order
  41. Littorinimorpha
    rank: order
  42. Neuroptera
    rank: order
  43. Odonata
    rank: order
  44. Plecoptera
    rank: order
  45. Trichoptera
    rank: order
  46. Rhynchobdellida
    rank: order
  47. Trombidiformes
    rank: order
  48. Unionoida
    rank: order
  49. Veneroida
    rank: order
  50. Seriata
    rank: order
  51. Aeschnidae
    rank: family
  52. Ichneumonidae
    rank: family
  53. Ancylidae
    rank: family
  54. Anthomyiidae
    rank: family
  55. Aphelocheiridae
    rank: family
  56. Asellidae
    rank: family
  57. Astacidae
    rank: family
  58. Athericidae
    rank: family
  59. Atydae
    rank: family
  60. Baetidae
    rank: family
  61. Beraeidae
    rank: family
  62. Bithyniidae
    rank: family
  63. Blephariceridae
    rank: family
  64. Brachycentridae
    rank: family
  65. Branchiobdellidae
    rank: family
  66. Caenidae
    rank: family
  67. Calamoceratidae
    rank: family
  68. Calopterygidae
    rank: family
  69. Cambaridae
    rank: family
  70. Capniidae
    rank: family
  71. Ceratopogonidae
    rank: family
  72. Chaoboridae
    rank: family
  73. Chironomidae
    rank: family
  74. Chloroperlidae
    rank: family
  75. Chrysomelidae
    rank: family
  76. Clambidae
    rank: family
  77. Coenagrionidae
    rank: family
  78. Corbiculidae
    rank: family
  79. Cordulegrastridae
    rank: family
  80. Corduliidae
    rank: family
  81. Corixidae
    rank: family
  82. Corophidae
    rank: family
  83. Culicidae
    rank: family
  84. Curculionidae
    rank: family
  85. Dendrocoelidae
    rank: family
  86. Dixidae
    rank: family
  87. Dolichopodidae
    rank: family
  88. Dreissenidae
    rank: family
  89. Dryopidae
    rank: family
  90. Dugesiidae
    rank: family
  91. Dytiscidae
    rank: family
  92. Ecnomidae
    rank: family
  93. Elmidae
    rank: family
  94. Empididae
    rank: family
  95. Ephemerellidae
    rank: family
  96. Ephemeridae
    rank: family
  97. Ephydridae
    rank: family
  98. Erpobdellidae
    rank: family
  99. Gammaridae
    rank: family
  100. Gerridae
    rank: family
  101. Glossiphoniidae
    rank: family
  102. Glossosomatidae
    rank: family
  103. Goeridae
    rank: family
  104. Gomphidae
    rank: family
  105. Gordiidae
    rank: family
  106. Gyrinidae
    rank: family
  107. Haemopidae
    rank: family
  108. Haliplidae
    rank: family
  109. Hebridae
    rank: family
  110. Helophoridae
    rank: family
  111. Heptageniidae
    rank: family
  112. Hirudinidae
    rank: family
  113. Hydraenidae
    rank: family
  114. Hydridae
    rank: family
  115. Hydrobiidae
    rank: family
  116. Hydrochidae
    rank: family
  117. Hydrometridae
    rank: family
  118. Hydrophilidae
    rank: family
  119. Hydropsychidae
    rank: family
  120. Hydroptilidae
    rank: family
  121. Hygrobiidae
    rank: family
  122. Lepidostomatidae
    rank: family
  123. Leptoceridae
    rank: family
  124. Leptophlebiidae
    rank: family
  125. Lestidae
    rank: family
  126. Leuctridae
    rank: family
  127. Libellulidae
    rank: family
  128. Limnephilidae
    rank: family
  129. Limoniidae
    rank: family
  130. Lymnaeidae
    rank: family
  131. Mesoveliidae
    rank: family
  132. Molannidae
    rank: family
  133. Muscidae
    rank: family
  134. Naucoridae
    rank: family
  135. Nemouridae
    rank: family
  136. Nepidae
    rank: family
  137. Neritidae
    rank: family
  138. Niphargidae
    rank: family
  139. Noteridae
    rank: family
  140. Notonectidae
    rank: family
  141. Odontoceridae
    rank: family
  142. Oligoneuriidae
    rank: family
  143. Osmylidae
    rank: family
  144. Palaemonidae
    rank: family
  145. Pediciidae
    rank: family
  146. Perlidae
    rank: family
  147. Perlodidae
    rank: family
  148. Philopotamidae
    rank: family
  149. Phrygaenidae
    rank: family
  150. Physidae
    rank: family
  151. Piscicolidae
    rank: family
  152. Planariidae
    rank: family
  153. Planorbidae
    rank: family
  154. Platycnemididae
    rank: family
  155. Pleidae
    rank: family
  156. Poduridae
    rank: family
  157. Polycentropodidae
    rank: family
  158. Polymitarcidae
    rank: family
  159. Potamanthidae
    rank: family
  160. Prosopistomatidae
    rank: family
  161. Psephenidae
    rank: family
  162. Psychodidae
    rank: family
  163. Psychomyiidae
    rank: family
  164. Ptychopteridae
    rank: family
  165. Rhagionidae
    rank: family
  166. Rhyacophilidae
    rank: family
  167. Sciomyzidae
    rank: family
  168. Scirtidae
    rank: family
  169. Sericostomatidae
    rank: family
  170. Sialidae
    rank: family
  171. Simuliidae
    rank: family
  172. Siphlonuridae
    rank: family
  173. Sisyridae
    rank: family
  174. Sphaeriidae
    rank: family
  175. Spongillidae
    rank: family
  176. Stratiomyidae
    rank: family
  177. Succineidae
    rank: family
  178. Syrphidae
    rank: family
  179. Tabanidae
    rank: family
  180. Taeniopterygidae
    rank: family
  181. Thaumaleidae
    rank: family
  182. Thiaridae
    rank: family
  183. Unionidae
    rank: family
  184. Tipulidae
    rank: family
  185. Unionidae
    rank: family
  186. Valvatidae
    rank: family
  187. Veliidae
    rank: family
  188. Viviparidae
    rank: family
  189. Ancylus
    rank: genus
  190. Corbicula
    rank: genus
  191. Dreissena
    rank: genus
  192. Ferrissia
    rank: genus
  193. Hydra
    rank: genus
  194. Pacifastacus
    rank: genus
  195. Podura
    rank: genus
  196. Procambarus
    rank: genus
  197. Spongillidae
    rank: order
  198. Stylommatophora
    rank: order
  199. Arrenuridae
    rank: family
  200. Pyralidae
    rank: family
  201. Thremmatidae
    rank: family
  202. Hydracarina
    rank: genus

Geographic Coverages

The spatial coverage of this dataset comprises the Ebro River Basin.

Bibliographic Citations

  1. Alba-Tercedor, J., P. Jaimez-Cuellar P., Lvarez M a., Avile´s J., Bonada N., Casas J., Mellado a., Ortega M., Pardo I., Prat N., Rieradevall M., Robles S., Sainz-Cantero CE., Sanchez-Ortega a., Suarez ML., Toro M., Vidal-Abarca MR., Vivas S., Zamora-Munoz C. 2002. Caracterizacion del estado ecologico de rıos mediterraneos ibericos mediante el ındice IBMWP (antes BMWP’). Limnetica 21:175–185. -
  2. Ariño AH. 1991. Bibliography of Iberian polychaetes: A data base. Ophelia Suppl. 5:647–652. -
  3. Chapman AD. 2005. Principles and methods of data cleaning. Copenhagen. -
  4. CHE. 2005. Control del estado de las masas de agua superficiales - Informe de situación Año 2005. Technical report. -
  5. CHE. 2006. Red De Control Biológico En Ríos Informe Final Ríos Año 2006. Technical report. -
  6. CHE. 2007. Red de Control Biológico en Ríos Informe Final Ríos Año 2007. Technical report. -
  7. CHE. 2008. Red de Control Biológico en Ríos Informe Final Ríos Año 2008. Technical report. -
  8. CHE. 2009. Red de Control Biológico en Ríos Informe Final Ríos 2009. Technical report. -
  9. CHE. 2010. Red de Control Biológico en Ríos Informe Final Ríos Año 2010. Technical report. -
  10. CHE. 2011. Red de Control Biológico en Ríos Informe Final Ríos Año 2011. Technical report. -
  11. CHE. 2012. Explotación de la red de control operativo y de referencia de ríos en la cuenca del ebro en aplicación de la directiva marco del agua. Technical report. -
  12. CHE. 2013. Explotación de la red de control ecológico de ríos en la cuenca del ebro en aplicación de la directiva marco del agua. Technical report. -
  13. CHE. 2014. Explotación de la red de control ecológico de ríos de la cuencua del Ebro en aplicación de la Directiva Marco del Agua. Technical report. -
  14. CHE. 2015. Explotación de la red de control ecológico de ríos de la cuencua del Ebro en aplicación de la Directiva Marco del Agua. Technical report. -
  15. CHE. 2017.Información Básica de la Cuenca del Ebro. Confederación Hidrográfica del Ebro (CHE): Datis climatológicos. Available at http://www.chebro.es (accessed June 24, 2017). -
  16. European Parliament & European Council. 2000. Directive 2000/60/EC. -
  17. GBIF Secretariat. GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist Dataset. doi:10.15468/39omei. Accessed via https://www.gbif.org/species/5284517 on 23th October 2017 -
  18. Jáimez-Cuéllar P., Luzón-Ortega J., Palomino-Morales JA., Alba-Tercedor J. 2006. Evaluación Del Estado Ecológico De Los Cursos De Agua . Implicaciones Sobre La Obtención De Datos ( Abundancia ) Según La Directiva Marco Del Agua . :1–59. -
  19. MAGRAMA. 2013. Protocolo De Muestreo Y Laboratorio De Fauna Bentónica De Invertebrados En Ríos Vadeables. (ML-Rv-I-2013). :23. -
  20. Oscoz J., Galicia D., Miranda R. 2011. Identification Guide of Freshwater Macroinvertebrates of Spain. DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-1554-7. -
  21. Pebesma EJ., Bivand R. 2005. Classes and methods for spatial data in R. News 5. -
  22. Pebesma E., Sumner M., Hijmans R. 2013. Package ’ rgdal ’. -
  23. R Core Team. 2016. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing. -
  24. Tachet H., Richoux P., Bournaud M., Usseglio-Polatera P. 2000. Invertébrés d’eau douce. Systématique, Biologie. -
  25. Wickham H. 2007. Reshaping Data with the reshape Package. Journal of Statistical Software 21:1–20. -

Contacts

MZNA Museum of Zoology, University of Navarra
originator
position: Institution
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
homepage: http://www.unav.edu/web/museodecienciasnaturales
Nora Escribano
metadata author
position: PhD student
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
homepage: http://www.unav.edu/departamento/ambiun/
userId: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7863-4463
Control del Estado de las Masas de Agua Superficiales
metadata author
position: Institution
Confederación Hidrográfica del Ebro
ES
homepage: http://www.chebro.es/
Javier Oscoz
originator
position: Researcher
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
userId: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8464-9442
Control del Estado de las Masas de Agua Superficiales
originator
position: Institution
Confederación Hidrográfica del Ebro
ES
homepage: http://www.chebro.es/
MZNA Museum of Zoology
curator
position: Institution
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
homepage: http://www.unav.edu/web/museodecienciasnaturales
Concha Durán
author
position: Project management
Confederación Hidrográfica del Ebro
ES
Patricia Navarro
author
position: Project management
Confederación Hidrográfica del Ebro
Ana Amezcua
curator
position: Technician
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
homepage: http://www.unav.edu/departamento/ambiun/
Ángel Chaves
curator
position: Technician
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
homepage: http://www.unav.edu/departamento/ambiun/
María Imas
curator
position: Technician
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
homepage: http://www.unav.edu/departamento/ambiun/
Arturo H Ariño
custodian steward
position: Professor
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
homepage: http://www.unav.edu/departamento/ambiun/
userId: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4620-6445
Rafael Miranda
point of contact
position: Professor
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
homepage: http://www.unav.edu/departamento/ambiun/
userId: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4798-314X
David Galicia
administrative point of contact
position: Professor
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
homepage: http://www.unav.edu/departamento/ambiun/
userId: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-2585-9888
Arturo H Ariño
administrative point of contact
position: Professor
University of Navarra
Irunlarrea, 1
Pamplona
31008
Navarra
ES
Telephone: 948425600
email: [email protected]
homepage: http://www.unav.edu/departamento/ambiun/
userId: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4620-6445
Javier Oscoz
administrative point of contact
position: Researcher
University of Navarra
Navarra
ES
email: [email protected]
userId: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8464-9442
O que é o GBIF? API Perguntas frequentes Boletim informativo Privacidade Termos e acordos Citações Código de Conduta Agradecimentos
Contato GBIF Secretariat Universitetsparken 15 DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø Denmark
GBIF is a Global Core Biodata Resource
OSZAR »