Data

Dataset describing the longitudinal density and wing length of anophelines in Solomon Islands

James Cook University
McLaughlin, Kimberley
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.25903/5caedbc8a62cb&rft.title=Dataset describing the longitudinal density and wing length of anophelines in Solomon Islands&rft.identifier=10.25903/5caedbc8a62cb&rft.publisher=James Cook University&rft.description=A series of Human Landing Catches (HLC) were conducted in 6 villages (Jack Harbour, Kinamara, Saeragi, Tuguivili, New Mala, and Haleta) across Central and Western Province of the Solomon Islands. This work commenced on July 2015 and was completed on July 2017. The complete data that has been analysed for the below titled manuscript has been archived into one database for ease of use:Kimberley McLaughlin, Tanya L. Russell, Allan Apairamo, Hugo Bugoro, Jance Oscar, Robert D. Cooper, Nigel W. Beebe, Scott A. Ritchie, Thomas R. Burkot (2019) The smallest Anopheles farauti occur during the peak transmission season of the Solomon IslandsThe full methodology is available in the Open Access publication from the Related Publications link below.&rft.creator=McLaughlin, Kimberley &rft.date=2019&rft.relation=https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-019-2847-2&rft.coverage=156.98418321088,-7.8984826958117 160.63164414838,-8.833242409149 160.53276719526,-9.5165217789931 156.86333360151,-8.789815758881 156.98418321088,-7.8984826958117&rft.coverage=Solomon Islands&rft_rights=&rft_rights=CC BY 4.0: Attribution 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0&rft_subject=Anopheles farauti&rft_subject=malaria&rft_subject=solomon Islands&rft_subject=Wing length&rft_subject=density dependence&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Licence & Rights:

Open Licence view details
CC-BY

CC BY 4.0: Attribution 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

Access:

Open view details

Open: free access under license

Full description

A series of Human Landing Catches (HLC) were conducted in 6 villages (Jack Harbour, Kinamara, Saeragi, Tuguivili, New Mala, and Haleta) across Central and Western Province of the Solomon Islands. This work commenced on July 2015 and was completed on July 2017. The complete data that has been analysed for the below titled manuscript has been archived into one database for ease of use:

Kimberley McLaughlin, Tanya L. Russell, Allan Apairamo, Hugo Bugoro, Jance Oscar, Robert D. Cooper, Nigel W. Beebe, Scott A. Ritchie, Thomas R. Burkot (2019) The smallest Anopheles farauti occur during the peak transmission season of the Solomon Islands

The full methodology is available in the Open Access publication from the Related Publications link below.

Notes

This dataset consists of a description of data archiving and data dictionaries in PDF format and a spreadsheet in both MS Excel (.xlsx) and Open Document (.ods) formats.

Created: 2019-04-11

Data time period: 07 2015 to 31 07 2017

This dataset is part of a larger collection

Click to explore relationships graph

156.98418,-7.89848 160.63164,-8.83324 160.53277,-9.51652 156.86333,-8.78982 156.98418,-7.89848

158.74748887494,-8.7075022374024

text: Solomon Islands

Subjects

User Contributed Tags    

Login to tag this record with meaningful keywords to make it easier to discover

Identifiers
  • DOI : 10.25903/5CAEDBC8A62CB
  • Local : researchdata.jcu.edu.au//published/b81d4abd400d781c4d3bbdfdbde62dba
  • Local : e208b6df3ba290b8df54ed68bf256d43