{"help": "https://data.gov.au/data/api/3/action/help_show?name=package_show", "success": true, "result": {"archived": false, "author": "Berry, Olly", "author_email": null, "contact_point": "Oliver.Berry@csiro.au", "creator_user_id": "c2fbbe4a-4ba0-4945-808b-67454605a4cf", "duplicate_score": 2, "geospatial_topic": [], "id": "7cf4a45d-3572-45ec-869d-10bbbcb150dc", "isopen": false, "license_id": "cc-by-sa", "license_title": "Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 3.0 Australia", "license_url": "http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/au/", "maintainer": "Maintainer Not Specified", "maintainer_email": "info@data.wa.gov.au", "metadata_created": "2025-06-23T04:51:46.497680", "metadata_modified": "2025-06-23T04:51:48.651023", "name": "wamsi-2-kimberley-node-project-1-1-3-ecological-connectivity_d6e2", "notes": "Reproduction and recruitment underlie the maintenance of biological communities. For most marine organisms the ocean environment provides the potential for widespread dispersal of organisms during various life cycle stages via currents, tides and wind. \nWithin the Kimberley region, key biological communities have a range of reproductive modes. Understanding patterns of larval connectivity is critical to managing the exposure of biological communities to disturbances in space and time.\nKSN Project 1.1.3 employed genomic tools (microsatellite DNA markers and single nucleotide polymorphisms) and microchemistry to provide the first comprehensive measurements of the distances moved by marine organisms between Kimberley reefs, and how frequently organisms move between the Kimberley and other regions (e.g. offshore shoals, the Pilbara). The research also identified potential barriers to movement. Seven organisms (two hard corals, two seagrasses, a mollusc, two fishes) were chosen as models for exploring connectivity in the Kimberley at both fine and broad scales.\nSamples for genetic analysis were collected during joint WAMSI/traditional owner field trips to the Dampier Peninsular and Buccaneer Archipelago in Spring and Summer 2014.\nThis metadata record applies to three of the seven species investigated as part of project WAMSI 2 KSN 1.1.3. The data held is Raw SNP genotype. Metadata records associated with other species and lodged by AIMS, WA Museum, Curtin University, Department of Fisheries (WA) and Edith Cowan University can be accessed via Pawsey.", "num_resources": 1, "num_tags": 0, "organization": {"id": "f6583a73-4b2b-41a3-9f96-e7ce02005fee", "name": "western-australian-marine-science-institution-western-australia-government", "title": "Western Australian Marine Science Institution", "type": "organization", "description": "The Western Australian Marine Science Institution (WAMSI) is a leading Australian marine research organisation.\r\n \r\nIts structure is like no other because it is a collaboration of State, Federal, industry and academic entities cooperating to create benchmark research and independent, quality scientific information. \r\n \r\nIt carries out research into climate change, biodiversity, the iconic Ningaloo Marine Park, sustainable fisheries, biotechnology and oceanography, and has overseen the development of a marine bioresources library that will store thousands of marine samples collected by researchers.\r\n \r\nWestern Australia\u2019s marine ecosystems are facing unprecedented pressure from an increasing number of uses such as oil and gas extraction, tourism, aquaculture and large coastal developments.\r\n \r\nGovernments, industry and the community face bigger, more frequent and more rapid decisions relating to marine and coastal planning. Enhancing their ability to do so needs greater strategic understanding of our ocean environment.\r\n \r\nWAMSI's 15 partners have built on a strong marine science capacity with more than 250 scientists working on 85 research projects.", "image_url": "", "created": "2025-06-23T13:20:27.494424", "is_organization": true, "approval_status": "approved", "state": "active"}, "original_harvest_source": {"site_url": "https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au", "href": "https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/wamsi-2-kimberley-node-project-1-1-3-ecological-connectivity_d6e2", "title": "Western Australia Government"}, "original_name": "wamsi-2-kimberley-node-project-1-1-3-ecological-connectivity_d6e2", "owner_org": "f6583a73-4b2b-41a3-9f96-e7ce02005fee", "private": false, "promotion_level": "0", "remote_last_updated": "2025-02-05 06:30:03.502256", "spatial": "{\"type\":\"MultiPolygon\",\"coordinates\":[[[[112.044817,-26.249083],[112.044817,-11.323867],[128.397983,-11.323867],[128.397983,-26.249083],[112.044817,-26.249083]]]]}", "spatial_coverage": "{\"type\":\"MultiPolygon\",\"coordinates\":[[[[112.044817,-26.249083],[112.044817,-11.323867],[128.397983,-11.323867],[128.397983,-26.249083],[112.044817,-26.249083]]]]}", "state": "active", "temporal_coverage_from": "2014-07-01 00:00:00", "temporal_coverage_to": "2016-12-30 00:00:00", "title": "WAMSI 2 - Kimberley Node - Project 1.1.3 Ecological Connectivity", "type": "dataset", "unpublished": false, "url": null, "version": null, "extras": [{"key": "harvest_object_id", "value": "97cbf568-c98f-41de-adc1-5a721ee89405"}, {"key": "harvest_source_id", "value": "1aa77fd2-6ef6-4687-ab94-0cc2f998cd41"}, {"key": "harvest_source_title", "value": "Western Australia Government"}], "resources": [{"access_level": "open", "cache_last_updated": null, "cache_url": null, "created": "2018-08-15T01:16:19.578288", "datastore_active": false, "datastore_contains_all_records_of_source_file": false, "description": "Embargoed until 2019", "format": "XLSX", "hash": "", "id": "a6a50c1c-0861-409d-bc6e-32be9812b46b", "last_modified": null, "metadata_modified": "2025-06-23T04:51:46.494401", "mimetype": null, "mimetype_inner": null, "name": "Data on CSIRO DAP", "package_id": "7cf4a45d-3572-45ec-869d-10bbbcb150dc", "position": 0, "resource_type": null, "size": null, "state": "active", "url": "https://doi.org/10.4225/08/5b379b4175033", "url_type": null, "zip_extract": false}], "tags": [], "groups": [], "relationships_as_subject": [], "relationships_as_object": []}}