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. 2019 Jun 12;6:85. doi: 10.1038/s41597-019-0092-8

Biodiversity data rescue in the framework of a long-term Kenya-Belgium cooperation in marine sciences

Carolien Knockaert 1,, Lennert Tyberghein 1,, Annelies Goffin 1, Delphine Vanhaecke 1, Harrison Ong’anda 2, Enock O Wakwabi 2, Jan Mees 1
PMCID: PMC6561920  PMID: 31189883

Abstract

The Kenya-Belgium data collection includes about 111,800 biotic observations on benthos, algae, fish, zooplankton, phytoplankton, birds and mangroves which cover more than 400 unique locations that were sampled between 1873 and 1999. The scope of this data digitization project was to recover data in theses and reports resulting from marine and coastal research activities in the Eastern African region conducted between 1984 and 1999. Data were digitized and quality checked in the frame of the Belgian LifeWatch project. The dataset provides a better insight into the different types of research conducted between 1985 and 1996 in frame of the Kenya-Belgium cooperation in marine sciences (KBP) project and can facilitate further coastal biodiversity research in Kenya.

Subject terms: Marine biology, Biodiversity


Design Type(s) data integration objective • species comparison design • data normalization objective
Measurement Type(s) Scientific Publication
Technology Type(s) digital curation
Factor Type(s) temporal_interval • Species • geographic location
Sample Characteristic(s) Actinopterygii • Kenya • ocean biome • Acantharia • Asteroidea • Anthozoa • Chromadorea • Florideophyceae • Arachnida • Hexanauplia • Malacostraca • Ulvophyceae • Bacillariophyceae • Holothuroidea • Enoplea • Aves • Dinophyceae • Polychaeta • Leptocardii • Ophiuroidea • Cyanophyceae • Bivalvia • Appendicularia • Gastropoda • Ascidiacea • Echinoidea • Magnoliopsida • Rhabditophora • Cephalopoda • Branchiopoda • Insecta • Collembola • Crinoidea • Phaeophyceae • Thaliacea • Clitellata • Hydrozoa • Kinorhyncha • Larvacea • Loricifera • Scyphozoa • Ostracoda • Pycnogonida • Chlorophyceae • Priapulida • Sagittoidea • Dictyochophyceae • Phyllopharyngea • Spirotrichea • Turbellaria

Machine-accessible metadata file describing the reported data (ISA-Tab format)

Background & Summary

The Kenya-Belgium cooperation in marine sciences (KBP) project was launched in 19851 as an initial collaboration between the Free University of Brussels (VUB) and the Kenya Marine and Fisheries Research Institute (KMFRI) under the supervision of the late Prof. Dr. Philip Polk. The aim was to improve the collaboration between different scientific institutes and marine scientists in Belgium and Kenya. The project consisted of three successive phases. The first phase of the KBP, named Cooperation in the field of marine ecology and management of the coastal zone (1985–1988) included an update of the necessary sampling equipment (basic lab, cars, boats and computers) and the start of a postgraduate course Fundamental and Applied Marine Ecology (FAME) at VUB for scientists of developing countries. The first fundamental research efforts were logically directed at the inventory and description of fauna and flora at the Kenyan Coast (Gazi Bay). The initial phase was extended for another four years (1989–1992) in a new project called Higher institute for marine sciences. The main objective was to conduct fundamental research in the areas of plankton, reef ecology, water chemistry, coastal oceanography and modelling, fisheries, algae, pollution and library sources. The successful cooperation between Kenya and Belgium and the coordinating role of the KBP proved to be a major attraction to other countries in East-Africa and Europe and resulted in several major international projects. As a logical extension, a third phase of the KBP started with a project on Research towards sustainable exploitation of natural resources in mangrove forests (1992–1996) with the continuation of the research on fish, crustaceans, birds, algal and phytoplankton cultivation and pollution monitoring. Most important realizations in this phase were the development of African’s largest oyster farm in Gazi Bay and the reforestation of more than 10 hectares of mangrove forests (90,000 trees of 5 different mangrove species). Between 1985 and 1996, a total of 13 KMFRI researchers completed the FAME course at the VUB. During this period, the number of scientific publications, especially in international journals, increased considerably (Table 1). In 2012, the long lasting collaboration as described above resulted in a formal Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ) and the Kenya Marine and Fisheries Research Institute (KMFRI). This MoU aims to promote further partnership in the field of marine sciences between Belgium and Kenya (in a coordinated way). One of the activities within this MoU is the recovery of data resulting from marine research in Kenya. In the past, the data collected during the KBP were mostly scattered and even hidden in the publications and reports coming out of the project. In that way, such data are nowadays hard to find for researchers: a lot of time may be lost when figuring out either where to find the data in literature or what type of data exist in a particular scientific work. Thanks to this project potentially high interesting data were digitized, standardized, quality controlled and brought together in one comprehensive dataset. Overall, this data rescue project focused on the digitization and online disclosure of distribution records of observed taxa in both time and space to make these data accessible again for the scientific community. The Kenya-Belgium data collection is online available through the LifeWatch portal (http://www.lifewatch.be/en/marine-data-archeology) and can be assessed through the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) hosted at VLIZ.

Table 1.

Scientific publications by KMFRI researchers between 1975 and 1994. Adapted from Seys, J.1.

Source 1975–1979 1980–1984 1985–1989 1990–1994
Theses 0 9 8 9
Local journals and local symposia 3 24 30 22
International journals 1 4 27 34
Proceedings intern. symp. 0 5 3 3
Total 4 42 68 68

Methods

Data inventory

The first step was to identify potential literature for digitization. The Belgian Marine Bibliography or BMB (http://www.vliz.be/en/belgian-marine-bibliography) was searched to set up a Kenyan literature collection. The BMB is a reference list of publications on the Flemish coast and the Belgian Part of the North Sea as well as other marine, estuarine and coastal publications written by Belgian authors and scientists or foreign scientists affiliated with Belgian institutes. The BMB query resulted in a total of 402 theses and reports. First authors and affiliated institutes were contacted to gain approval and to comment on the digitization of the data in each publication. After setting priorities (selection of all publications concerning marine research in Kenya and the Eastern African region and approval by original authors and/or Belgian institutes for digitization and disclosure of the data), a total of 70 publications (29 reports and 41 theses) were selected for data digitizing (Online-only Table 1).

Quality control, standardization & data output

Data were digitized using a data format containing standard fields for a correct understanding of the data. The most important fields are the location linked through a Well-Known Text (WKT), sampling protocol and sample size, event date, scientific name, sex, lifestage and related measured biotic (describing the living organisms in the ecosystem) or abiotic parameters (chemical or physical parameters describing the environment of the observed species). Metadata were added by searching the original publications. The species taxonomy was verified using the taxon match tool offered by the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS - http://www.marinespecies.org), an authoritative and comprehensive list of names of marine organisms edited and reviewed by an international team of more than 240 taxonomic editors world-wide. Every species has a unique identifier2 known as the AphiaID. This identifier links the species name to an internationally accepted standardized name and associated taxonomic information, and also redirects to the most accurate information on the species taxonomy, (e.g. accepted names and synonyms). Next to the taxonomic information basic trait information was added in the database using Marine Species Traits (http://www.marinespecies.org/traits). If not present, geographical coordinates were added to the sampling locations either by georeferencing in QGIS based on the maps present in the particular studies or by matching with the Marine Regions Gazetteer3. In the next step datasets were created and described in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) and archived in the Marine Data Archive (MDA - http://mda.vliz.be). In the last step a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) was assessed to each dataset making them more visible, traceable and citable. A total of 86 datasets were finished and assigned with a DOI. Biotic datasets were transferred and integrated in AfroBIS (http://afrobis.csir.co.za), the African node of the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS) and can be downloaded though the EurOBIS (http://www.eurobis.org)/EMODnet Biology (http://www.emodnet-biology.eu) platform and via the KMFRI IPT (http://ipt.vliz.be/kmfri) hosted at VLIZ.

Data selection

The Kenya-Belgium data collection focused on the temporal and geographical distribution of biotic data. Experimental data (e.g. cage exclusion experiments) and data on stomach analysis of fish species were excluded from the collection. Eventually 68 unique biota datasets were selected to integrate in the data collection (Online-only Table 2).

Data Records

The Kenya-Belgium data collection contains a total of 111,784 biotic observations in the Eastern African region dating from 1873 till 1999.

Geographical coverage

Samples were collected at 408 point locations (Fig. 1). Most of these were located along the Kenyan Coast, more specifically at Gazi Bay, and represented about 87% of database records. This is easily explained because the first research efforts made in frame of the KBP were to make an inventory and description of fauna and flora at the Kenyan Coast and Gazi Bay. The second largest collection of observations originated from the coastal area of Tanzania, followed by the East Coast of South Africa. Furthermore, a substantial part of the dataset observations came from the Seychelles and Socotra.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Georeferenced map of all biological observations and sampling locations at Gazi Bay, Kenya.

Themes & temporal coverage

The biological datasets were classified into 8 groups based on the number of observations belonging to a specific functional group (lower limit 70%) (Fig. 2). Data are available from 1873 to 1999 (Fig. 3). Data records from 1873, 1875 and 1964 are literature records and were not part of research field surveys. The increase in number of datasets per year is clearly correlated with the launch of the KBP and the start of the FAME course for KMFRI researchers. The number of field surveys increased immediately in 1985 and decreased again in 1997 (end of successive phase 3 of the KBP). The diversity of research topics was the highest in 1991 and 1992 and could be linked to KBP phase 2 for which the main objective was to conduct multidisciplinary research on plankton, reef ecology, fisheries, algae and dynamics of mangrove ecosystems.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Thematic coverage of datasets.

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Temporal distribution of biological datasets per theme.

Taxonomic coverage

99.8 % of original scientific names have been referenced through the WoRMS database representing in total 2,198 unique aphiaIDs. Within these unique aphiaIDs 78.8% of used names were accepted in literature, 18.2% was not accepted in literature, 1.5% were alternate representations (species that are represented twice: once with and once without subgenus) and 1.3% had an uncertain status (unassessed). 67.5% were identified to the species level (1490 unique aphiaID’s). 750 records were not suitable (group names e.g. meiobenthos, non-identified, eggs, zooplankton) for a taxonomic match in WoRMS. These records together with non-matches (0.2%) were not discarded. The unmatched names may be added to the register after approval of the dedicated editor. The total Kenya-Belgium data collection includes records for 29 different phyla (Fig. 4). Half of the observation records belonged to the Chordata (represented by birds and fish taxa) and although this frequency is almost 12 times higher than the Ochrophyta observations (4.3%), the number of unique taxa for both phyla were almost the same (Fig. 5). Remarkable are the 142 observations on Myzozoa listed in the database, as these represent 53 unique taxa. An important research topic within the Kenya-Belgium Project (KBP) was the description and inventory of benthic fauna in the mangroves of Gazi Bay. 15.8% of benthic invertebrate observations in Gazi Bay were identified at species level. The benthic invertebrate species community belonged to only 3 phyla and 6 classes, of which the Mollusca were most represented (57.7%). 30% of mollusc observations were on the mangrove oyster Crassostrea cucullata, and more specifically on its ecomorphology (physical properties of the shell and live biomass of observed species). Within the phylum of Arthropoda 2 classes were identified: Hexanauplia, represented by the benthic copepods (20 unique species), and Malacostraca of which all taxa belonged to the order of Decapoda, and more specifically to the Brachyuran mangrove crabs (56 unique species).

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

Taxonomic coverage of data collection: percentage of observations per phylum.

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5

Taxonomic coverage of data collection: number of unique taxa per phylum.

Documentation and dataset dissemination

The Kenya-Belgium data collection4 is accessible through IMIS and can be downloaded from the Marine Data Archive (MDA).

Technical Validation

The Kenya-Belgium database is a compilation of 68 biotic datasets which were digitized in the frame of a data rescue project. Focus was the digitization of historical biological data sampled in the Eastern African Region and/or in the frame of the Kenya-Belgium cooperation in marine sciences project (KBP) or collected by Belgian or Kenyan marine researchers. Many sources of historically collected data exist, but are scattered in different databases, hidden in papers or reports or even stored on old storage media such as cassettes, disks, tapes, cd’s, etc. There is an enormous amount of information already collected and stored in a standardized way about the world’s biodiversity. To date most of this old information has not been digitized. The digitization strategy used in this work was to stay as close to the original source data as possible. However, data from different sources always needs to be interpreted with caution. Hence, users of this dataset need to consider two caveats. First, not all data records hold data for all parameters/variables present in the final dataset, simply because they were not measured. Therefore, it might seem that there are quite some gaps. However, on the contrary, providing this information as well only increases the completeness of this dataset. Second, despite the effort to search the original publications for missing metadata, there are obviously still gaps (e.g. sampling date -and location) due to the fact that they were not properly described in the original publications. Notwithstanding the above caveats, the digitizing of historical data is crucial to fill in the spatial and temporal gaps in the data that is currently available to science. The current availability of biodiversity data from this region is still too low to give an adequate insight in the underlying processes that control the functioning of our ecosystems. This data rescue project certainly has improved and contributed to create a better accessibility (open access) and visibility of the data to the scientific community. The species list will be used to contribute to AfReMaS, the African Register of Marine Species - http://www.marinespecies.org/afremas), a taxonomic database of marine species found along the African coast. Next to that, these revitalized datasets can serve as a starting point for the biodiversity work in the Second International Indian Ocean Expedition (http://www.iioe-2.incois.gov.in) program. The sustainable use and management of biodiversity will require data about it to be available when and where decision-makers and scientists alike need that type of information.

Usage Notes

All data are publicly available in Open Access and can be used under the license of CC BY with acknowledgement of the authors.

ISA-Tab metadata file

Download metadata file (3.7KB, zip)

Acknowledgements

This work makes use of data and/or infrastructure provided by VLIZ and funded by Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO) as part of the Belgian contribution to LifeWatch (FWO project I000819N). LifeWatch was established as part of the European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructure (ESFRI) and can be seen as a virtual laboratory for biodiversity research. Special thanks to the KMFRI staff providing data and information to fill in the gaps concerning the Kenyan datasets. Thanks to Nathalie De Hauwere and Britt Lonneville for GIS support.

Online-only Tables

Online-only Table 1.

Overview of original sources digitized and integrated in the Kenya-Belgium data collection.

Author (publication date) Source type Data type
Aernaudts, H. (1990) MSc Thesis Biota
Anyango, C. (2000) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Bollen, A. (1993) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Boone, A. (1996) MSc Thesis Biota
Cattaert, S. (1997) Thesis Biota
De Bont, R. (1999) Thesis Biota
De Pauw, K. (1990) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
De Schryver, T. (1990) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
De Smet, I. (2000) MSc Thesis Biota
De Troch, M. (1995) MSc Thesis Biota
De Wit, M. (1988) Ir Thesis Biota/abiota
Demeulenaere, B. (1989) BSc Thesis Biota
Demeulenaere, B. (1991) MSc Thesis Biota
Dethier, K. (1997) Thesis Biota
Gallin, E. (1988) Ir Thesis Biota
Garcia de Camargo, M. (1995) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Geerinckx, T. (2002) MSc Thesis Biota
Gillikin, D.P. (2000) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Gurdebeke, S. (1998) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Humphreys, W.F. (1981) Report Biota
Joseck, D.M. (1991) BSc Thesis Biota
Juma, B. (1987) Report Abiota
Kairo, J.G. (1993) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Kazungu, J.M. (1986) Report Abiota
Leuci, D. (1995) MSc Thesis Biota
Luhunga, B.Y. (1997) MSc Thesis Biota
Melles, A. (1991) MSc Thesis Biota
Mutua, A.K. (2000) MSc Thesis Abiota
Muylle, J. (2000) MSc Thesis Biota
Mwamsojo, G.U.J. (1994) MSc Thesis Biota
Mwangi, S.N. (1994) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Nasirwa, O. et al. (1995) Report Biota
Ndede, R.O. (1998) MSc Thesis Biota
Ntiba, J.M. et al. (1991) Report Biota
Obade, P.T. (2000) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Okemwa, E. (1987) Report Biota
Okemwa, E. (1990) PhD Thesis Biota
Okemwa, E. et al. (1991) Report Biota
Okondo, J. (1995) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Osore, M.K.W. (1994) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Oteko, D. (1987) Thesis Abiota
Polk, P. (1986) Report Biota/abiota
Polk, P. et al. (1993) Report Biota/abiota
Poppe, B. (1997) Thesis Biota
Pratiwi, R. (1995) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Rao, R.G. (1991) MSc Thesis Biota
Reid, A. (2002) MSc Thesis Biota
Roels, T. (1998) MSc Thesis Biota
Ruwa, R.K. (1987) Report Biota
Samyn, Y. (1995) MSc Thesis Biota
Schallier, R. (1993) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Schrijvers, J. (1991) Thesis summary Biota/abiota
Schrijvers, J. (1996) PhD Thesis Biota/abiota
Silence, J. (1993) BSc Thesis Biota
Steyaert, M. (1993) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Vackier, I. (1993) MSc Thesis Biota
Van Avermaet, P. (1990) BSc Thesis Biota
Van den heede, C. (1994) MSc Thesis Biota
Van Hout, T. (1998) MSc Thesis Biota
Van Waeyenberge, J. (1994) Thesis Biota
Van Zele, M. (1992) MSc Thesis Biota
Vanhove, S. (1990) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Verellen, A. (1990) MSc Thesis Biota
Vermin, W. (1998) BSc Thesis Biota
Verneirt, M. (1994) MSc Thesis Biota/abiota
Verstraete, H. (1993) MSc Thesis Biota
Wakwabi, E.O. (1999) PhD Thesis Biota
Wakwabi, E.O. et al. (1991) Report Biota
Wamukoya, G. (1987) Report Biota
Wawiye, O. (1995) MSc Thesis Biota

Online-only Table 2.

Temporal and geographical coverage of biota datasets integrated in the Kenya-Belgium data collection.

Dataset subject Temporal coverage Geographical coverage No. records Metadata link
Count of observed waterbirds 1995 Kenyan coast, Lake Victoria, Tana river 2235 https://doi.org/10.14284/175
List of microphytoplankton species 1992 Kenyan coast 228 https://doi.org/10.14284/74
List and counts of ichthyofauna of a seagrass bed 1993 Gazi Bay 31 https://doi.org/10.14284/113
List of phytal harpacticoid fauna 1986–1988 Gazi Creek, McKenzie Point, Fort Jesus 37 https://doi.org/10.14284/114
Counts and abundance of epiphytic meiofauna and nematodes from seagrasses 1989 Gazi, Nyali 1226 https://doi.org/10.14284/115
Counts of hyperbenthos 1994 Gazi Bay 610 https://doi.org/10.14284/79
Meiobenthos densities in Avicennia marina mangrove sediments 1992–1993 Gazi Bay 943 https://doi.org/10.14284/80
Abundance and habitat of echinoderm species 1969 Kenyan coast, Watamu, Mida Creek, Kilifi 1512 https://doi.org/10.14284/97
List of seagrasses and benthic macroalgae of the tidal channels 1989 Gazi Bay 9449 https://doi.org/10.14284/120
List of the genus Dictyopteris 1985–1999 Western Indian Ocean 70 https://doi.org/10.14284/96
List of Padina species 1985–1999 Western Indian Ocean 158 https://doi.org/10.14284/158
List of Cladophorales species 1985–1992 Kenyan coast 105 https://doi.org/10.14284/98
List of Codiales species 1985–1993 Kenya, Zanzibar, Seychelles 137 https://doi.org/10.14284/99
List of intertidal benthic diatoms 1991 Gazi Bay 273 https://doi.org/10.14284/81
List of Caulerpales species 1985–1989 Kenyan Coast 122 https://doi.org/10.14284/82
List of Siphonocladales species 1985–1992 Kenyan Coast 107 https://doi.org/10.14284/100
List of Ceramiaceae species 1985–1997 East-African coast 115 https://doi.org/10.14284/101
Qualitative abundance of zooplankton taxa 1985–1986 Port Reitz Creek 300 https://doi.org/10.14284/102
List of macrofauna species 1986 Gazi, Kanamai, Malindi Bay 119 https://doi.org/10.14284/103
List of Dictyotales species 1985–1994 Kenya, Tanzania 107 https://doi.org/10.14284/107
List of seagrasses and associated macroalgae 1987 West Gazi Bay 380 https://doi.org/10.14284/117
Counts of epibenthic fish species 1996 Gazi Bay 410 https://doi.org/10.14284/94
Composition and densities of the meiobenthic community 1996 Gazi Bay 6057 https://doi.org/10.14284/85
Counts of Mysidacea sp. 1994 Gazi Bay 53 https://doi.org/10.14284/87
Counts of Isopoda 1994 Gazi Bay 97 https://doi.org/10.14284/83
Counts of Mysidacea sp. 1994–1996 Gazi, Uroa, Ambon 20 https://doi.org/10.14284/84
List of sampled reef corals 1990 Kenyan Coast 82 https://doi.org/10.14284/109
Shell measurements and biomass of the mangrove oyster Crassostrea cucullata 1991 Gazi 133 https://doi.org/10.14284/86
List of Typhloplanoida 1985–1997 Zanzibar, Kenya, Kerguelen, Australia, Weddell Sea 42 https://doi.org/10.14284/93
Counts of Echinothrix diadema and its substrate coverage 1997 Mombasa Marine National Park and Reserve 66 https://doi.org/10.14284/89
List of harpacticoid copepods in tropical seagrass beds 1996 Gazi Bay, Mbweni 164 https://doi.org/10.14284/108
Length, weight measurements of Sphaeramia orbicularis, counts of potential prey items and other observed fish 1993 Gazi Bay 330 https://doi.org/10.14284/75
List, counts and length of observed fish 1990 Gazi Creek 31 https://doi.org/10.14284/111
Zooplankton taxon abundances 1990–1991 Gazi Creek 870 https://doi.org/10.14284/110
Epibenthos and fish species counts 1994 Gazi Bay 7868 https://doi.org/10.14284/95
Length, width and weight of Echinotrix diadema and E. Calamaris species 1994–1995 Mombasa Marine National Park 424 https://doi.org/10.14284/88
Overview and counts of phytal Harpacticoida collected on seagrasses 1991 Gazi Bay, Tudor Creek 338 https://doi.org/10.14284/105
List of zooplankton taxa and copepod species 1984–1987 Tudor Creek 1003 https://doi.org/10.14284/118
List of epiphytic macroalgae species and coverage percentages 1989 Gazi Bay 3839 https://doi.org/10.14284/119
Cell measurements and densities on phytoplankton species 1989 Gazi Creek 54 https://doi.org/10.14284/142
Zonation and list of mangrove vegetation and associated fauna 1993 Gazi Bay, Mida Creek 365 https://doi.org/10.14284/150
Abundance of Asterropteryx semipunctatus and Gnatholepis sp.1 1995 Gazi Bay 222 https://doi.org/10.14284/77
Density of mangrove meiobenthos and nematode biomass measurements 1989 Gazi Bay 2453 https://doi.org/10.14284/144
Zooplankton densities 1998 Shirazi bay 810 https://doi.org/10.14284/91
Qualitative abundance data on marine flora 1986–1987 Kenyan Coast 1980 https://doi.org/10.14284/106
Counts and size ranges of fish species 1990–1991 Gazi Creek 71 https://doi.org/10.14284/112
Counts of observed fish species 1993 Gazi Bay 750 https://doi.org/10.14284/146
Benthos densities ? Gazi Bay 10 https://doi.org/10.14284/145
Catch data on fish and invertebrates 1994–1996 Gazi Bay 55151 https://doi.org/10.14284/152
Zooplankton and phytoplankton densities in oyster farms 1992 Gazi Creek 1770 https://doi.org/10.14284/149
Copepoda species list and zooplankton densities 1990–1992 Gazi, Lamu, Malindi 2857 https://doi.org/10.14284/153
Macrobenthos densities and nematode biomass sampled in a Ceriops tagal mangrove 1992–1993 Gazi Bay 1326 https://doi.org/10.14284/155
List of found macroalgal and seagrass species and study on algal community on pneumatophores of mangrove trees 1987 Gazi Bay 601 https://doi.org/10.14284/164
Counts of mangrove crabs in mangrove forests 1998–1999 Dabaso, Gazi 46 https://doi.org/10.14284/157
Mangrove species list ? Gazi Bay 8 https://doi.org/10.14284/179
Species composition and biomass of seagrass and macroalgae communities 1991 Gazi Bay 119 https://doi.org/10.14284/163
List of epiphytic macroalgae and relative abundance of mangrove microphytobenthos 1987–1991 Gazi Bay 65 https://doi.org/10.14284/159
Zooplankton qualitative abundances and species composition 1990–1991 Gazi Creek 111 https://doi.org/10.14284/161
Density of major macrobenthos taxa in mangroves 1990 Gazi Bay 480 https://doi.org/10.14284/162
Abundance and length measurements of identified fish species 1991–1992 Gazi Creek 399 https://doi.org/10.14284/165
Checklist of hermatypic coral species and distribution data of coral genera ? Kenyan Coast 364 https://doi.org/10.14284/166
Relative abundances, counts and length measurements of penaeid shrimps 1986 Tudor Creek 91 https://doi.org/10.14284/167
List of estuarine fish species 1985 Port Reitz, Tudor Creek 33 https://doi.org/10.14284/176
Presence/absence data on brackish water crabs 1985–1986 Gazi, Kanamai, Bamburi, Mkomani 112 https://doi.org/10.14284/168
Presence/absence data on planktonic copepods 1984–1985 Tudor Creek 159 https://doi.org/10.14284/171
Zooplankton abundance and dry weight and length measurements of copepods 1985–1986 Fort Jesus, Tudor Creek 37 https://doi.org/10.14284/172
Identification and habitat description of Gracilaria salicornia and other algae 1986 MacKenzie Point 67 https://doi.org/10.14284/177
Presence/absence of macroalgae and their zonation patterns on rocky cliffs 1985 Mombasa 1182 https://doi.org/10.14284/178

Author Contributions

Carolien Knockaert: digitization and quality control of data, dataset descriptions and DOI requests, compilation of data, drafting and revising the article. Dr. Delphine Vanhaecke: acquisition of data and initial quality control, revision of the article. Annelies Goffin: acquisition of data and revising of the article. Dr. Lennert Tyberghein: drafting and revising the article.

Competing Interests

The authors declare no competing interests.

Footnotes

Publisher’s note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Contributor Information

Carolien Knockaert, Email: carolien.knockaert@vliz.be.

Lennert Tyberghein, Email: lennert.tyberghein@vliz.be.

ISA-Tab metadata

is available for this paper at 10.1038/s41597-019-0092-8.

References

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