global biodiversity
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WWW.GBIF.ORG. GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY. INFORMATION FACILITY. Promoting open access to biodiversity data and metadata: The GBIF way. Beatriz Torres Senior Prog. Off. - Outreach and Cap. Building - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
GLOBALBIODIVERSITY
INFORMATIONFACILITY
Beatriz Torres Senior Prog. Off. - Outreach and Cap.
Building
Strategies for Open and Permanent Access to Scientific Info. in Latin America. Atibaia, Brazil, 7-
10 May 2007
WWW.GBIF.ORG
Promoting open access to biodiversity data and metadata:
The GBIF way
Questions for the meeting
1. What are the main challenges and barriers to providing permanent open access to S&T data and information ?
Mobilizing biodiversity data:
• Huge job
• ~300 years of Linnean work (identification and naming of species)
• +1.7 million described species.
• Biodiversity data is complex
Biological Data Domain - challenges
Persistent ? digital and physical data stores, moderately accessible
Migration of legacy data, metadata generation, taxonomy (species)
80% ? digitalEcological & Ecosystem Data
Persistent physical data stores, accessible with difficulty
Digitisation, migration of legacy data, indexing
<5% digitalSpecies- & Specimen Data
Persistent digital, universally accessible data stores
Data migration, cleansing, vouchering, taxonomy (gene & species)
95% digitalMolecular Sequence & Gene/Genome Data
Sub-domain Digital Status
Greatest Informatics Problems
Data Status
Challenges - Barriers
Cultural:
• Idiosyncratic duplications of effort – the “Not Invented Here” syndrome
• “Central database” thinking
• Potential data providers’ resistance to: Potential data providers’ resistance to: • including metadata in their databasesincluding metadata in their databases• adopting standards for data and metadataadopting standards for data and metadata
Barriers:
• Institutional: e.g. No reward system
• Legal (IPRs)
• Policies
• Technological (interoperability)
Question 2
What are some of the most promising existing models or mechanisms for providing this access?
Will present the GBIF Experience (www.gbif.org)
GBIF’s is a global scientific initiative
• Mission:
Make primary biodiversity data freely and openly available via the internet.– Development of tools, standards & protocols ->
interoperability of databases. Digitization. Catalogues of names and capacity building.
• Started in 2001
• Members: Governments + international organizations
Everything GBIF does is in partnership with others
Conservation Commons
GTI, Species loss (2010 indicators), GSPC, CHM,
GBIF to date has mobilized 122+ mill. biodiversitydata records (observational, names and specimen data)
Obligations for GBIF members
• Share biodiversity data
• Build a Node(s) -> build a network ...
GBIF Policies
• GBIF is a gateway. It does not own the data it serves -> data belongs to the data providers.
• Full atribution to data providers (citation format)• Data travels with metadata (names of
scientists/data providers, restrictions if any ...• Not serving sensitive data (e.g. location on
endangered species).• GBIF does not impose IPRs.
– Data use and data sharing agreements in place (citation of data sources is a must!)
– ProBono Legal Expert Advisory Group– Next: Exploring with the Science and Creative
Commons the use of licensing agreements.
Establishing clear rules and a working framework
2006 GBIF Governing Board Recommendation on Open Access
To research councils, other funding agencies and private foundations …
• Promote that proposals for funding for biodiversity research include a plan for the maintenance and sharing of the digital biodiversity data generated in proposed projects;
• Promote that species and specimen level data and associated metadata that are generated in funded projects are made publicly available through mechanisms cooperating with GBIF, within a specified period after completion of the supported research."
Open Access (legally binding)
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) Decision VIII/11, 2006, under Scientific and Technical Cooperation.
CBD... Invites Parties and other Governments, as appropriate, to provide free and open access to all past, present and future public-good research results, assessments, maps and databases on biodiversity, in accordance with national and international legislation;
Mobilizing biodiversity data (www.gbif.org)
Sandwich tern distributionSterna sandwichensis
New GBIF Portal launching July 2007
PUTTING GBIF-mediated
BIODIVERSITY DATA TO USE
0
50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
300,000
350,000
400,000
450,000
500,000
1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
Tamandua mexicana
Alouatta paliata
Ateles geoffroyi
Guaiacum sanctum
Sciurus aberti
Peromyscus spicilegus
Sciurus nayaritensis
Assessing species loss through time (CBD 2010 target and indicators): Indices of biodiversity loss can be calculated, for species of national interest
(endangered, commercially-valuable…)
Illustrations from Conabio, Mexico and O. M. Chisano Source: Soberón & Peterson 2007
Modeling and prediction of impact of alien invasive species:
Long-horned Asian beetle invades the USA from China in wooded crates
(Town Peterson)
Distribution model for N.America based on climatic conditions.
Places where the Asian long-horned beetle was recorded (Chicago y NY)
Red: High probabilities of invasion.
(Town Peterson)
Jorge Soberón
Peromyscus maniculatus Main vector of Main vector of Hanta virus
Low probabilityty
Medium probability
High probability
Peromyscus maniculatus
Jorge Soberón
Effect of global climate change on butterfly species richness: now versus 2020
Present
2020
Peterson et al.
#S#S#S#S #S#S #S#S #S#S
#S#S #S#S #S#S #S#S#S #S#S#S
#S #S#S#S#S#S #S#S #S#S#S#S #S#S #S#S#S
#S#S #S#S#S #S#S#S#S #S #S#S#S#S#S #S#S#S#S#S#S#S #S#S#S #S#S #S#S #S#S#S#S#S#S#S#S#S#S#S#S#S#S #S#S#S#S
#S#S
Cd. Obregón
Tecomán, Col.
Comarca Lagunera
Planicie Huasteca
Gossypium barbadense
Source: Jorge Soberón
Diseases: Climate Change effects
Where are malaria vectors likely to find appropriate climate and environmental conditions in the future?
Here, we present the average of two scenarios created by the Hadley Climate Change Center … for the year 2050.
quadriannulatus
merusmelasgambiaearabiensis
Red areas will be more appropriate to the mosquitoes in the future, blue areas less
Town Peterson with Mark Benedict and Bex Levine
What is next? Moving to ... full implementation:
• New Data Portal (July 2007). Integration of interactive maps, web services, multiple taxonomy display, improved validation and feedback to data providers.• Specialized training (DiGIR/Tapir, sensitive data, geo-referencing, data modeling).• Now: Development of standards for species (e.g. Plinian Core)• Work with IPRs (with the Science & Creative Commons) • Open source tools to help data providers
–improve data quality–Geo-reference descriptive locality data–Tools to help planning, address conservation issues and decision-making– Involvement in the CBD 2010 indicators
How to contact GBIF?
Web site: www.gbif.org Data portal: www.gbif.net
GBIF SecretariatUniversitetsparken 152100 CopenhagenDenmark
E-mail: [email protected]: +45 3532 1470Fax: +45 3532 1480
New GBIF Secretariat headquarters, supported by grant from Aage V. Jensens Fonde
GBIF’s areas of work • The types of data
that GBIF -> no duplication of any existing effort.
Solution 2
• GBIF provides some matching funding to help computerise biodiversity data
• GBIF urges funding sources to provide funds to digitise biodiversity data
• GBIF calls upon funding agencies to consider requiring that data in biodiversity projects be made openly available
• GBIF has assembled a set of guidelines and tools for improving data quality
Three papers on data quality and use are available at www.gbif.org