dataset_doi	dataset_key	dataset_title	dataset_citation	number_records
10.15468/16fwgc	fee15ebc-27ce-4aff-b912-2657bbd493d2	USAC Mammals Collection	Pérez Consuegra S G (2016). USAC Mammals Collection. Version 8.1. Museo de Historia Natural de la USAC MUSHNAT. Occurrence Dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/16fwgc accessed via GBIF.org on 2017-05-31.	25
10.15468/igaciv	9666593a-f762-11e1-a439-00145eb45e9a	Collection Mammalia SMF		8
10.15468/tsrjm0	4d749d70-e2e1-11dd-8102-b8a03c50a862	Rapid Assessment Program (RAP) Biodiversity Survey Database	Conservation International. Rapid Assessment Program (RAP) Biodiversity Survey Database. Occurrence Dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/tsrjm0 accessed via GBIF.org on 2018-03-06.	2
10.15468/jfqhiu	bb5b30b4-827e-4d5e-a86a-825d65cb6583	Paleobiology Database	You can cite the Paleobiology Database in several ways. First, you can cite the specific e- publication that you used (see above). Second, you can refer to a specific download from the PaleoBioDB, giving the date and parameters of the download. Here is an example: The data were downloaded from the Paleobiology Database on 31 December, 2013, using the group name 'marine' and the following parameters: time intervals = Eocene and Oligocene, region = Europe, paleoenvironment = marine, Order = Cetacea. In such a case, you may want to cite or acknowledge the people who contributed the bulk of the data to the database. We also strongly encourage that you create a secondary bibliography for work that uses large data sets. You can easily download all of the references that contributed to a dataset for this secondary bibliography. Many journals will accept a secondary bibliography as a supplementary material file, and this type of citation helps ensure that the hard work performed by members of our community collecting and describing fossil organisms gets acknowledged properly.	1
10.15468/2rlrvh	c5c4a23e-2035-4416-ab64-032d6df52ddb	Mammalogy Collection - Royal Ontario Museum		1
