Wallace v2.0 Animalia: Habitat suitability distribution modelling for Animalia worldwide

Climate change scenarios were sourced from the UK Met Office Hadley Centre for CMIP5 global climate models and scaled to 20km resolution. Species occurrence records were downloaded from GBIF. Maxent was used to model the habitat suitability distributions.
https://wallaceinitiative.org/

    Data Record Details
    Data record related to this publication Wallace v2.0
    Data Publication title Wallace v2.0 Animalia: Habitat suitability distribution modelling for Animalia worldwide
  • Description

    Climate change scenarios were sourced from the UK Met Office Hadley Centre for CMIP5 global climate models and scaled to 20km resolution. Species occurrence records were downloaded from GBIF. Maxent was used to model the habitat suitability distributions.
    https://wallaceinitiative.org/

  • Other Descriptors
    • Descriptor
    • Descriptor type
  • Data type dataset
  • Keywords
    • climate change
    • biodiversity
    • species distributions
    • conservation
    • invertebrates
    • Annelida
    • Chordata
    • Arthropoda
  • Funding source
    • UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
  • Research grant(s)/Scheme name(s)
    • - NERC grant. no. NE/PO14992/1
  • Research themes
    Tropical Ecosystems, Conservation and Climate Change
    FoR Codes (*)
    SEO Codes
    Specify spatial or temporal setting of the data
    Temporal (time) coverage
  • Start Date
  • End Date
  • Time Period
    Spatial (location) coverage
  • Locations
    Data Locations

    Type Location Notes
    Physical Location QCIF Collection Q2025
    The Data Manager is: Erin Graham
    College or Centre eResearch Centre
    Access conditions Conditional: Contact researchdata@jcu.edu.au to request access to this data.
  • Alternative access conditions
  • Data record size 91.3 TiB
    Citation Graham, Erin; VanDerWal, Jeremy; Atkinson, Ian (2021): Wallace v2.0 Animalia: Habitat suitability distribution modelling for Animalia worldwide. James Cook University. https://doi.org/10.25903/xfrm-d787