Dataset: NMR spectral files from study of metabolomics of blue crab urine inducing fear in prey

ValidatedFinal no updates expectedVersion 19 December 2017 (2017-12-19)Dataset Type:experimental

Principal Investigator: Marc Weissburg (Georgia Institute of Technology)

Co-Principal Investigator, Contact: Julia Kubanek (Georgia Institute of Technology)

Student: Remington Poulin (Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology)

BCO-DMO Data Manager: Shannon Rauch (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)


Project: The role of the sensory environment and predator chemical signal properties in determining NCE strength in cascading interactions on oyster reefs (SensoryNCE)

This dataset includes the following files, packaged in a .zip file:

  • archived_pca_spectra.zip = unprocessed 1H NMR spectral data files underlying PCA analysis in the publication "Chemical encoding of risk perception and predator detection among estuarine invertebrates."
  • archived_pls-r_spectra.zip = unprocessed 1H NMR spectral data files underlying PLS-R analysis in the publication "Chemical encoding of risk perception and predator detection among estuarine invertebrates."
  • README_ArchivedSpectraDataset (1).doc = readme file describing the files.
  • spectral_labels_for_pls-r_dataset.xlsx = spreadsheet containing spectral labels.

Poulin et al (2018) contains the analyses of the processed data. These NMR data files are also available from the Georgia Tech database, SMARTech at http://hdl.handle.net/1853/59056


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Different Version

Dataset: https://hdl.handle.net/1853/59056
Poulin, R. X., Lavoie, S., Siegel, K., Gaul, D. A., Weissburg, M. J., & Kubanek, J. (2017). Chemical encoding of risk perception and predator detection among estuarine invertebrates dataset.

Related Publications

Results

Poulin, R. X., Lavoie, S., Siegel, K., Gaul, D. A., Weissburg, M. J., & Kubanek, J. (2018). Chemical encoding of risk perception and predator detection among estuarine invertebrates. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 115(4), 662–667. doi:10.1073/pnas.1713901115