Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The SCAR Standing Committee on Antarctic Data Management (SCADM) Promoting and curating the vital legacy of Antarctica Contact information:
Advertisements

SCADM Report Working Paper 10. Overview SCAR Data and Information Management Strategy (DIMS) – endorsed Oct Introduction to the draft SCAR Data.
Integrated Taxonomic Information System Janet Gomon, Deputy Director, ITIS Smithsonian Institution Museum of Natural History The.
OBIS Australia – Regional Node for the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS) OBIS Australia is an operational component of the Census of Marine.
Building the Digital Coast with the International Coastal Atlas Network Ned Dwyer Coastal & Marine Resources Centre, Ireland Dawn Wright Oregon State University.
The International Coastal Atlas Network: An Emerging Spatial Data Infrastructure Initiative Ned Dwyer, Yassine Lassoued Coastal & Marine Resources Centre,
Natural England and MEDIN, Challenges and Achievements Ian Saunders Lead Adviser, Geographic Information and Analysis Services Team.
Knowledge Management C S R PRABHU BY Deputy Director General
ODINAFRICA Ocean Data and Information Network for Africa.
EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION OF DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH AND TRAINING INSTITUTES European experience in networking development research & training institutes,
EBSAs to Marine Spatial Planning toward achieving Aichi Targets in marine and coastal areas in support of Blue Economy 8 th Meeting of the Conference of.
Dr Costas Papaconstantinou
Dawn Wright Oregon State University Ned Dwyer Coastal & Marine Resources Centre, Ireland The International Coastal Atlas Network (ICAN) FGDC Marine & Coastal.
Ocean Tracking Network Bob Branton, Lenore Bajona, Susan Dufault, Brian Jones, Marta Mihoff Dalhousie University, Halifax Canada Global.OceanTrack.org.
NATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANTARCTIC AND OCEAN RESEARCH Indian National Antarctic Data Center (INADC) 7 th September 2011 Indian Antarctic Data Centre Management.
VOCABULARIES A data management presentation. Data management best practices Inventory of resources/datasets – Database level or series of datasets/collections.
The Potentials and Limitations of Coastal Web Atlases Valerie Cummins, Director Coastal Zone ‘07, Oregon.
ICAN-V ICAN – Global Expertise in Coastal Atlases Chairs: Marcia Berman Virginia Institute for Marine Science, USA Ned Dwyer Coastal & Marine Research.
General strategy. Introduction Global “financial crisis” Beginning to cascade into GBIF Now thinking about the forward strategy and next work programme.
Partnership Centre for IODE Ocean Data Portal – goals and tasks Dr. Sergey Belov, et al. Partnership Centre for the IODE Ocean Data Portal MINCyT, Buenos.
The Sea Around Us: Seeing our past, present and future through data in space and time Impacts of fisheries on the world’s marine ecosystems
Online Data Flanders Marine Data & Information Centre InnovOcean site SeadataNet Annual Meeting, Madrid 2009.
Design central EMODnet portal Objectives, Technical Proposal and Consultation Process.
National training, 11 January 2008, Lusaka Technical and scientific cooperation through the Clearing House Mechanism of the Convention on biological diversity.
Slide 1 WGISS CEOS WGISS 21, Budapest 8-12 May 2006 WGISS Contribution to GEO WGISS Contribution to GEO Ivan Petiteville.
ESIP Federation Air Quality Cluster Partner Agencies.
GT-NET Benefits Designation as a ‘participating network’ Enhanced collaboration Policy dimension Synergy Resources Visibility Improved data analysis Etc.
IODE Ocean Data Portal – from data access to integration platform Sergey Belov, Tobias Spears, Nikolai Mikhailov International Oceanographic Data and Information.
Challenge Grant Update: Linking the Network of Natural Heritage Biodiversity Data to the Environmental Information Exchange Network.
Isabel Calabuig Lotte Endsleff 1 NODES regional MEETING Europe Digitarium,
A Prototype Ontology Tool and Interface for Coastal Atlas Interoperability Dawn J. Wright 1, Luiz Bermudez 2 (presenter), Liz O’Dea 3, Yassine Lassoued.
Results of a Needs Assessment Survey of the Global Invasive Species Information Network Biodiversity Information Standards- Taxonomic Databases Working.
WGISS and GEO Activities Kathy Fontaine NASA March 13, 2007 eGY Boulder, CO.
1 The National Biological Information Infrastructure and Biodiversity Collections Annette Olson BCI meeting, Washington DC, January 28-29th, 2008.
Information Management and Biodiversity Research – The Role of the Biodiversity Information System of Colombia Alexander von Humboldt Biological Resources.
International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange - Ocean Data Portal (IODE ODP) Enabling science through seamless and open access to marine data.
National Oceanographic Data Center of Ukraine (Marine Biology) LaMIS, IBSS NAS Ukraine Results of work (October 2009 – October 2010) 3-d meeting of the.
Antarctic Marine Biodiversity Information.
The International Coastal Atlas Network (ICAN) Overview and Recent Activities Ned Dwyer Dawn Wright.
ISWG / SIF / GEOSS OOSSIW - November, 2008 GEOSS “Interoperability” Steven F. Browdy (ISWG, SIF, SCC)
ISWG / SIF / GEOSS OOS - August, 2008 GEOSS Interoperability Steven F. Browdy (ISWG, SIF, SCC)
Knowledge base for growth and innovation in ocean economy: assembly and dissemination of marine data for seabed mapping LOT 5 – BIOLOGY WP4 Data archaeology.
Cooperation and Interoperability Lenore Bajona, Robert M. Branton Ocean Tracking Network
Ocean Tracking Network I have since 2008, been data management director for the Ocean Tracking Network (OTN) at Dalhousie University.
Grant Writing 2012 Grant Writing for Digital Projects September 2012 IODE Project Office IODE Project Office Oostende, Belgium Oostende, Belgium.
COINAtlantic Expanding OBIS Canada partnerships and Visualizing OBIS Canada IPT Resources SG-OBIS-V May 25 – 27, 2016 UNESCO/IOC Project Office for IODE.
OTN Canada Symposium Data Management Workshop Robert Branton, Susan Dufault, Marta Mihoff, Lenore Bajona, Brian Jones Faculty.
PROPOSAL TO ESTABLISH A REGIONAL AMAZONIAN BIODIVERSITY NODE Ambassador Mauricio Dorfler – ACTO Executive Director Amazonian Biodiversity Workshop Quito,
Using Analysis and Tools to Inform Adaptation and Resilience Decisions -- the U.S. national experiences Jia Li Climate Change Division U.S. Environmental.
Workshop Introduction and Policy Overview Bob Branton Director of Data Management, Ocean Tracking Network, Dalhousie University, 1355 Oxford Street, PO.
Improving Access to Animal Acoustic Telemetry Observations Project Demo Workshop Seattle Washington, Thursday June 13, 2013 Bob Branton, Lenore Bajona,
3.2) Data sharing and dissemination Data Sharing between OBIS-SEAMAP, OBIS and GBIF.
Digital Collection Development Policy
OceanDocs Digital Repository of Marine Science Research Outputs
ICAN – Global Expertise in Coastal Atlases
GEO WP 1. INFRASTRUCTURE (Architecture and Data Management)
Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ)
Capacity Building Enhance the coordination of efforts to strengthen individual, institutional and infrastructure capacities, particularly in developing.
Becoming an OBIS Node.
EC FP7 - Cooperation Theme 6: Environment (incl. climate change)
Mapping and Modelling Distribution of Invasive Plant Species
EMIS. EDUCATION MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM (EMIS)
The GOOS and GCOS partnership
Considerations in Development of the SBSTA Five Year Programme of Work on Adaptation Thank Mr. Chairman. Canada appreciates this opportunity to share.
Animal-Borne Instrument Task Team ABI TT Terms of Reference
Chapter 5: Water management and adaptation
Objectives, Scope and Structure of Country Reports
The Digital Library for Earth System Education (DLESE):
Conclusion Bob Branton Director of Data Management, Ocean Tracking Network, Dalhousie University, 1355 Oxford Street, PO BOX 15000, Halifax, NS, Canada 
AUC’s Role In Facilitating Access To Knowledge In The Arab World
Presentation transcript:

Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS) Building Synergies with IOC projects & related Initiatives Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS) Robert Branton Director of Data Management, Ocean Tracking Network Dalhousie University, Halifax Canada Bob.Branton@dal.ca

http://www.iobis.org/

Typical Use Scenarios What organisms have been found or observed here? http://iobis.org/mapper/ What organisms have been found or observed here? Where has this organism been found or observed? Oncorhynchus nerka / sockeye salmon

OBIS nodes (data assembly centres) are engaged in a wide spectrum of activities, which demonstrates that the role of OBIS is not limited to raw data encoding but also to develop tools and products and offering services (including capacity building) for data-science and science-policy activities on a local, regional to global scale. http://iobis.org/obis/regional-nodes

OBIS Statisitics Number of datasets: 1,130 Number of valid species with data: 146,496 http://iobis.org/about/statistics

Discovery Metadata Collaboration between OBIS and the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) has resulted the OBIS Master Directory at GCMDhttp://gcmd.gsfc.nasa.gov/KeywordSearch/Home.do?Portal=OBIS&MetadataType=0 413 records

News Highlights May 2013 - Mike Flavell joined IOC Project Office for IODE, in Oostende Belgium to provide technical support to OBIS and marine biodiversity related activities at IODE. Nov 2012 - Second IODE Steering Group for OBIS meeting was held at IOC Project Office for IODE in Oostende, Belgium. 2012 - All OBIS activities previously at Rutgers University, USA were transferred to IODE in Oostende. http://iobis.org/news

Relevance OBIS is an evolving strategic alliance of people and organizations sharing a vision to make marine biogeographic data, from all over the world, freely available over the World Wide Web.  OBIS is increasingly picked-up by the scientific community; scientific papers using OBIS data appear on a weekly basis (80 publications in 2012) and 50,000 people visited the data portal in 2012 (35% are returning visitors).

Crossover ICAN … OBIS … Internet-accessible collections of digital maps and datasets with supplementary tables, illustrations and information. Systematically illustrate coastal areas for the purposes of coastal zone management and planning, including marine spatial planning. Portal to many datasets containing information on where and when marine species have been recorded. Provide guidance and information for the identification of Ecologically or Biologically Significant marine Areas.

Collaboration Opportunities ICAN … OBIS … A range of communications tools will be developed and utilised to ensure information sharing within the ICAN community itself and to reach out, attract new members and inform potential users of the benefits of CWAs. These tools will include a dedicated set of web pages … Will produce an IOC Manual and Guides for OBIS nodes that will include the definition of OBIS nodes, the terms of reference and procedure to establish OBIS nodes, standards and best practices (OBIS handbook) and a section on quality assurance, criteria and evaluation of OBIS nodes.

Filling Gaps In Ocean Knowledge For example: invasive species like tunicates. Didemnum vexillum marine vomit From broad maps, one sees that although more data is available from coastal areas than from open waters, less is known about smaller animals than larger ones and on the southern hemisphere than on the northern. OBIS is an open-access database with data from every corner of the world, whereby any provider (individual, institution, or otherwise) who cares to upload to the server and contribute to the global maps OBIS seeks to fill out. http://iobis.org/about/vision http://iobis.org/maps/distribution

Ocean Tracking Network Knowledge on where animals go and what they do. And questions like: How might ocean warming affect animal behaviour? Will some species flourish while others die? Might some migrate to where the ocean is cooler? What is impact on fishery management plans. http://global.oceantrack.org

Ocean Tracking Network Global Data Warehouse http://members.oceantrack.org 53.0 million records 32,082,397 detections 31,178 known animals 52 species 15 ocean regions 164 projects 73 institutions 14 countries OTN data managers at Dalhousie University and around the world are working to make the world's ocean tracking data and related information freely accessible without charge by the broader scientific community as well as respecting the intellectual property rights of its providers. 90% of these data are from unfunded contributors.

Thank You Bob.Branton@dal.ca