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1,771 Data sources

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  • HAMAP is a system, based on manual protein annotation, that identifies and semi-automatically annotates proteins that are part of well-conserved families or subfamilies: the HAMAP families. HAMAP is based on manually created family rules and is applied to bacterial, archaeal and plastid-encoded proteins.

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  • The European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization Global Database (EPPO) GD provides all pest-specific information that has been produced or collected by EPPO. Data includes plant and pest species (such as scientific names, synonyms, common names in different languages, taxonomic position, EPPO codes and geographic distribution), EPPO datasheets and PRA reports, and images.

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  • The Swissregulon Database contains genome-wide annotations of regulatory sites. The predictions are based on Bayesian probabilistic analysis of a combination of input information including i) Experimentally determined binding sites reported in the literature, ii) Known sequence-specificities of transcription factors, iii) ChIP-chip and ChIP-seq data, iiii) Alignments of orthologous non-coding regions.

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  • The Ocean Biodiversity (formerly Biogeographic) information System (OBIS) seeks to absorb, integrate, and assess isolated datasets into a larger, more comprehensive pictures of life in our oceans. The system hopes to stimulate research about our oceans to generate new hypotheses concerning evolutionary processes, species distributions, and roles of organisms in marine systems on a global scale. The abstract maps that OBIS generates are maps that contribute to the ‘big picture’ of our oceans: a comprehensive, collaborative, world-wide view of our oceans. OBIS provides a portal or gateway to many datasets containing information on where and when marine species have been recorded. The datasets are integrated so you can search them all seamlessly by species name, higher taxonomic level, geographic area, depth, and time; and then map and find environmental data related to the locations.

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1,771 Data sources
  • more_vert
  • HAMAP is a system, based on manual protein annotation, that identifies and semi-automatically annotates proteins that are part of well-conserved families or subfamilies: the HAMAP families. HAMAP is based on manually created family rules and is applied to bacterial, archaeal and plastid-encoded proteins.

    more_vert
  • more_vert
  • more_vert
  • more_vert
  • more_vert
  • The European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization Global Database (EPPO) GD provides all pest-specific information that has been produced or collected by EPPO. Data includes plant and pest species (such as scientific names, synonyms, common names in different languages, taxonomic position, EPPO codes and geographic distribution), EPPO datasheets and PRA reports, and images.

    more_vert
  • The Swissregulon Database contains genome-wide annotations of regulatory sites. The predictions are based on Bayesian probabilistic analysis of a combination of input information including i) Experimentally determined binding sites reported in the literature, ii) Known sequence-specificities of transcription factors, iii) ChIP-chip and ChIP-seq data, iiii) Alignments of orthologous non-coding regions.

    more_vert
  • more_vert
  • The Ocean Biodiversity (formerly Biogeographic) information System (OBIS) seeks to absorb, integrate, and assess isolated datasets into a larger, more comprehensive pictures of life in our oceans. The system hopes to stimulate research about our oceans to generate new hypotheses concerning evolutionary processes, species distributions, and roles of organisms in marine systems on a global scale. The abstract maps that OBIS generates are maps that contribute to the ‘big picture’ of our oceans: a comprehensive, collaborative, world-wide view of our oceans. OBIS provides a portal or gateway to many datasets containing information on where and when marine species have been recorded. The datasets are integrated so you can search them all seamlessly by species name, higher taxonomic level, geographic area, depth, and time; and then map and find environmental data related to the locations.

    more_vert