Global Biodiversity Information Facility GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY INFORMATION FACILITY Larry Speers Global Biodiversity Information Facility

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Public Finance and Empoyment Database of the OECD Dirk Kraan National Accounts Working Party Paris 1 December 2010.
Advertisements

From CESSDA to European Research Infrastructure Developments in cross-European data sharing.
European Clearing-House Mechanism Portal Toolkit Expert Group Meeting
E uropean N etwork for B iodiversity I nformation Cees H.J. Hof Universiteit van Amsterdam EC supported 5th framework programme.
“Steering and Funding – The Governance of science systems” Sources Based ont the reports of the Ad Hoc Working Group Steering and Funding of Research Institutions.
What is PIAAC?. About PIAAC PIAAC is an international large-scale assessment administered in in 23 countries It assessed 16 - to 65-year-olds,
Integrated Taxonomic Information System Janet Gomon, Deputy Director, ITIS Smithsonian Institution Museum of Natural History The.
SANBI’s role in promoting Biodiversity Information Standards in South Africa Sediqa Khatieb TDWG 2011
II Course on GBIF Node Management Arusha, Tanzania 31 st October and 1 st November 2008 The Global Biodiversity Information Facility Alberto GONZÁLEZ-TALAVÁN.
BIS TDWG Conference 28 October 2013, Florence Documenting data quality in a global network: the challenge for GBIF Éamonn Ó Tuama, Andrea Hahn, Markus.
The National Academies’ Board on Life Sciences Dr. Frances Sharples Director National Research Council National Research Council.
Delegations IV KAM Prague 3rd to 7th September 2014.
Global Biodiversity Information Facility GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY INFORMATION FACILITY Beatriz Torres Seminar on GBIF - Norway 25 September
Global Biodiversity Information Facility GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY INFORMATION FACILITY Georeferencing Workshop Dec. 5-7, 2006 Larry Speers.
European GBIF Nodes Meeting 2013 Rui Figueira Digitarium, Joensuu, Finland, March GBIF Portugal
Species Banks a GBIF mechanism to provide electronic access to quality species information Peter H. Schalk, Marc Brugman ETI, University of Amsterdam Tinde.
Forest Stewardship Council ® FSC, A.C. All rights reserved FSC Network development Gemma Boetekees Global Network Director March 2011.
Safety Driven Performance Conference 2013 The future of managing asset-intensive businesses John Keefe APM/RBMI Technical Manager Asset Integrity Services.
Key Innovations in Biodiversity Informatics. Opportunities (and challenges) for biodiversity information management in Brazil Biggest biodiversity in.
Richard Lane, Chair Natural History Museum, London Scientific Collections International (SciColl) An international coordinating mechanism OECD GSF Vienna.
European Life Sciences Infrastructure for Biological Information ELIXIR
«The International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP)» Prof Basie von Solms Immediate Past President IFIP University of Johannesburg South Africa.
The FishBase Information System Current coverage of Russian Biodiversity and Opportunities for Collaboration Rainer Froese Institute for.
1 Third Joint EC – OECD Workshop on Business and Consumer Tendency Surveys Brussels, November 2007 Session 7 OUTCOMES OF OECD SURVEY ON CURRENT NATIONAL.
OECD Review of Russian Statistics Peer Review Mission to Russia April 2012 Tim Davis Head, Global Relations, Statistics Directorate.
EnSI: Environment and School Initiatives (I.n.p.a./ivzw) 25 years of networking for EE and ESD.
Global Biodiversity Information Facility Background Presentation for Cyberinfrastructure for Environmental Research & Education Workshop Boulder, Colorado.
Resource Identification for a Biological Collection Information Service in Europe An introduction to the BioCISE project Walter G. Berendsohn Botanical.
Environmental issues and local development Partnerships and the Green Economy Styria, 11 th October 2010 Gabriela Miranda
Specify Software Project – Quick Facts
1 DanBIF Danish Biodiversity Information Facility Arbejdsseminar om GBIF i Norge Norges Forskningsråd, Oslo 25. September 2003 Isabel Calabuig.
The development of a full understanding of the diversity of livestock systems and indentifying priority areas for improving the quantification and mitigation.
C ross-European data sharing made easy EDAF Luxembourg.
Institute for Social Research - Zagreb Centre for Educational Research and Development THE STATUS OF INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY IN NATIONAL.
Results of the HPC in Europe Taskforce (HET) e-IRG Workshop Kimmo Koski CSC – The Finnish IT Center for Science April 19 th, 2007.
Digitization of Natural History Collections (DIGIT) Larry Speers Program Officer Digitization of Natural History Collections Data TDWG Annual Meeting Oct.
Global Biodiversity Information Facility GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY INFORMATION FACILITY DNA Barcoding in Southern Africa Cape Town 7 April
Draft GEO Framework, Chapter 6 “Architecture” Architecture Subgroup / Group on Earth Observations Presented by Ivan DeLoatch (US) Subgroup Co-Chair Earth.
COST Workshop on Developing Knowledge- Sharing Partnerships in Europe and Central Asia Orsolya Tóth National Innovation Office Gödöllő, 4 December, 2013.
Global Biodiversity Information Facility GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY INFORMATION FACILITY Meredith A. Lane CODATA/ERPANET Workshop: Scientific Data Selection &
The MICHAEL Project is funded under the European Commission eTEN Programme The multilingual catalogue of digital cultural heritage in Europe.
A L I M E N T A T I O N A G R I C U L T U R E E N V I R O N N E M E N T 1 G20 – 12th May 2011 An International Research Initiative for Wheat Improvement.
The Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS) A New Approach to Prevention, Early Warning & More Rapid Problem-Solving Vice Admiral Conrad C.
Symposium on Global Scientific Data Infrastructures Panel Two: Stakeholder Communities in the DWF Ann Wolpert, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Board.
Global coordination in neuroinformatics Jan G. Bjaalie INCF Secretariat Karolinska Institutet Stockholm.
1 The National Biological Information Infrastructure and Biodiversity Collections Annette Olson BCI meeting, Washington DC, January 28-29th, 2008.
TDWG Annual Meeting Outreach and Capacity Building Work Program Beatriz Torres October 2002, Indaiatuba, Brazil.
Global Biodiversity Information Facility GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY INFORMATION FACILITY Beatriz Torres IABIN 5th Council Meeting Punta del Este, Uruguay
Context: The Strategic Plan for Establishing the Network Integrated Biocollections Alliance Judith E. Skog, Office of the Assistant Director, Biological.
GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY INFORMATION FACILITY Dr Nick King Executive Director GBIF Linking global biodiversity data and the UNEP-WCMC World Database.
IABIN Executive Committee / Coordinating Institution Meeting GBIF and IABIN: status and opportunities in 2011 Juan Bello, Mélianie Raymond & Alberto González-Talaván.
NLBIF The Netherlands Biodiversity Information Facility NLBIF The Netherlands Biodiversity Information Facility Cees Hof Netherlands Biodiversity Information.
The (IMG) Systems for Comparative Analysis of Microbial Genomes & Metagenomes: N America: 1,180 Europe: 386 Asia: 235 Africa: 6 Oceania: 81 S America:
AUSTRALIA’S VIRTUAL HERBARIUM A national collaborative model for integrated access to distributed biological information Australian National Herbarium.
Amazon Basin Biodiversity Information Facility – ABBIF.
25-September-2005 Manjit Dosanjh Welcome to CERN International Workshop on African Research & Education Networking September ITU, UNU and CERN.
Professor Jim Lynch Chief Executive, Forest Research, GB.
Introduction to the OECD. 4 key questions Who are we? What do we do? How do we do it? What happens next?
12 th Meeting of the GBIF Participant Nodes Committee 6-7 October 2013, Berlin, Germany Data mobilization and use for international policy Olaf Bánki Senior.
Facilitating International Collaboration through New Funding Opportunities Maria Uhle Program Director, International Activities GEO Directorate U.S. National.
COST Action and European GBIF Nodes Anne-Sophie Archambeau.
12 th Meeting of the GBIF Participant Nodes Committee 6-7 October 2013, Berlin, Germany Towards a generic work programme for a Node Olaf Bánki Senior Programme.
Introduction to GBIF and the BID programme
What is PIAAC?.
Chair, FACCE-JPI Governing Board
GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY INFORMATION FACILITY (GBIF)
The Inter-American Biodiversity Information Network Progress Summary
building partnerships through effective networking Cancun, Mexico
The Public Finance and Empoyment Database of the OECD Dirk Kraan National Accounts Working Party Paris 1 December 2010.
Module 1: Introduction to the Convention on Biological Diversity
Presentation transcript:

Global Biodiversity Information Facility GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY INFORMATION FACILITY Larry Speers Global Biodiversity Information Facility Biodiversiteitsinformatie in Nederland woensdag 14 januari 2004

Global Biodiversity Information Facility “..there will be winners and there will be losers… The next century will be the ‘Age of Biology’, just as this one has been the age of physics and astronomy. Specifically, those countries who best know how to correlate, analyze, and communicate biological information will be in the leading position to achieve economic and scientific advances” Sir Robert May, Chief Scientist, U.K., July 1998

Global Biodiversity Information Facility What is GBIF ? A distributed megascience facility aimed at l Making the world’s biodiversity data freely and universally available via the Internet l Sharing primary scientific biodiversity data to benefit society, science and a sustainable future

Global Biodiversity Information Facility MEGASCIENCE FORUM of the OECD (became Global Science Forum after the GBIF recommendation was adopted) Examples of Working Groups: l Neutron Sources l Nuclear Physics l Radio Astronomy l Biological Informatics (1996–1999) Subgroup : Biodiversity Informatics Subgroup : Neuroinformatics Recommended that the Megascience Forum endorse development of the Global Biodiversity Information Facility

Global Biodiversity Information Facility When was GBIF started ? l The MoU resulted from the recommendations of an international working group / steering committee l The group met several times between June 1996 and December 2000, when the MoU was opened for signature l GBIF came into existence on 1 March 2001, when the first 10 countries signed the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) and pledged a total of US$2M

Global Biodiversity Information Facility GBIF Mission...making the world’s biodiversity data freely and universally available via the Internet.

Global Biodiversity Information Facility GBIF Voting Participants 24 l Australia l Belgium l Canada l Costa Rica l Denmark l Estonia l Finland l France l Germany l Iceland l Japan l Republic of Korea l Mexico l Netherlands l New Zealand l Nicaragua l Portugal l Peru l Slovenia l South Africa l Spain l Sweden l UK l USA

Global Biodiversity Information Facility GBIF Associate Participants l Argentina l Austria l Bulgaria l Czech Republic l Ghana l Madagascar l Morocco l Pakistan l Poland l Slovak Republic l Switzerland l Taiwan l Tanzania l European Commission l ALL Species Foundation l ASEANET l BioNET l BIOSIS l CABI Bioscience l EASIANET l Expert Centre for Taxonomic Identification l Inter-American Biodiversity Information Network l Integrated Taxonomic Information System l NatureServe l Ocean Biogeographic Information System Société de Bactériologie Systématique et Vétérinaire l Species 2000 l Taxonomic Databases Working Group l UNESCO Man and the Biosphere Program l UNEP (World Conservation Monitoring Centre) l World Federation for Culture Collections l Wildscreen Trust

Global Biodiversity Information Facility l Demand for Biological Information: l Biotechnology, biodiversity, climate change, environmental problems, invasive species, human health, sustainable development Why was GBIF established ?

Global Biodiversity Information Facility Nature is so complex We know so little

Global Biodiversity Information Facility l Demand for Biological Information: l Biotechnology, biodiversity, climate change, environmental problems, invasive species, human health, sustainable development l Bioinformatics l Computing Power: l Moore’s Law Why was GBIF established ?

Global Biodiversity Information Facility “With $2500 desktop PCs now delivering more raw computing power than the first Cray, bioinformatics is rapidly becoming the critical technology for the 21st century biology” R. Robbins, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

Global Biodiversity Information Facility Biodiversity informatics is the application of information technology to biodiversity with the emphasis on persistent data stores. Modified from R. Robbins, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Definition

DNA Phenotypes Proteins Populations Species Ecosystems Abiotic Factors Fundamental Dogma Adapted from R. Robbins

DNA Phenotypes Proteins Populations Species Ecosystems Abiotic Factors Bioinformatics Adapted from R. Robbins

Abiotic Factors Bioinformatics Persistent Primary Data Stores DNA Phenotypes Proteins Populations Species Ecosystems Adapted from R. Robbins Map Databases GenBank EMBL DDBJ PDB SwissPROT PIR

DNA Phenotypes Proteins Populations Species Ecosystems Abiotic Factors Biodiversity Informatics Adapted from R. Robbins

Abiotic Factors Persistent Primary Data Stores DNA Phenotypes Proteins Populations Species Ecosystems Adapted from R. Robbins Living Collections + Museum Collections Literature Observational Databases

Molecular Biological Informatics “bioinformatics” Age of “molecular biology” virtually equals age of computers (ca. 50 yr); > 95% of all data are digitized Many of the data automatically share common language (i.e., ATGC, amino acids, etc.) Minimum of $1B spent per year on "bioinformatics" Biodiversity Informatics Knowledgebase is 5X older than computers (ca. 250 yr); < 5% is digitized Data languages are immensely complex on biological and sociological levels (no standardization) $50M per year spent on biodiversity informatics, even though a minimum of $1B is spent per year on environmental observations globally Biodiversity Informatics as a Megascience Activity

Global Biodiversity Information Facility l Demand for Biological Information: l Biotechnology, biodiversity, climate change, environmental problems, invasive species, human health, sustainable development l Bioinformatics l Computing Power: l Moore’s Law l Electronic Connectivity l Internet l Distributed Information Systems Why was GBIF established ?

Global Biodiversity Information Facility

Where is GBIF located ? l Unlike CERN, the megascience instrumentation facility for particle physics that is located in Switzerland, GBIF is a megascience facility that is distributed all over the world, with its many parts connected by the Internet l The small, non-bureaucratic GBIF Secretariat is hosted by the Zoological Museum of the University of Copenhagen, Denmark CERN

Global Biodiversity Information Facility

What does GBIF do ? l In order to promote the sharing and use of scientific biodiversity data by everyone, it focuses on four areas of activity: l Data Access and Database Interoperability ( DADI) l Electronic Catalog of Names of Known Organisms ( ECAT ) l Outreach and Capacity Building ( OCB ) l Digitisation of Natural History Collections ( DIGIT)

Global Biodiversity Information Facility How does GBIF work ? l NODES Committee l Comprises the managers of the Participant nodes l Works with the Information and Communications Technology (ICT) staff of the Secretariat to develop the network of nodes l Participant nodes share software and ideas with each other and with data providers l Secretariat ICT staff advise, coordinate and provide software toolkits

Global Biodiversity Information Facility Network Structure Participant Portals or Nodes GBIF Portal Data-rich local sources Distributed, local or regional, specialised databases

Global Biodiversity Information Facility GBIF Principles l Equitable sharing of data l Data providers retain control l Protection of intellectual property rights l Distributed network architecture l Common standards and protocols l Partnership with other networks l Avoidance of duplication of effort l Promotion of technical developments to deal with complexity of biodiversity data

Global Biodiversity Information Facility The following is a simple classification of the biodiversity data for which GBIF is responsible: l Taxonomic data, including: l Scientific names, including data on synonymy l Vernacular names l Taxonomic descriptions, including diagnostic keys l Taxon occurrence information (primarily species- level, but including data for taxa at different ranks where appropriate): l Specimen records (from natural history collections) l Observation records l Links to other taxon-level information, including: l Information on taxon biology and life history l Ecological interactions l Genetic data l Sound and image resources

Global Biodiversity Information Facility Characteristics of the Species Level Biodiversity Data Domain- l Data developers are numerous, specialized and widely distributed l Government labs l Universities l Museums l Private individuals l Quality data critical to environmental decision making l Legacy data extremely valuable l Data are dynamic l Legacy data continually being updated and enhanced l New data continually being added l Primary data has common core attributes

Global Biodiversity Information Facility Primary species occurrence core data includes but is not limited to the following essential details: l Name of the taxon to which the organism has been assigned l Location where the specimen was collected or the observation made l Date on which the specimen was collected or the observation made l Where the specimen or record is held and how to access more information

Global Biodiversity Information Facility GBIF-DIGIT: Mission To facilitate the expansion of biodiversity knowledge by having legacy and newly acquired primary species occurrence data digitised and dynamically accessible.

Global Biodiversity Information Facility What are GBIF’s primary data ? l Associated notes, recordings, metadata, etc. l These data must be digitised in order to be shared and fully utilised GBIF-DIGIT l Label data on ~ billion specimens in natural history collections l Species level observational data sets

> 2 billion specimens worldwide

Global Biodiversity Information Facility

Natural History Collections Data l Strengths l Identification of specimens auditable l Potential for DNA analysis l Often long time series l Broad taxonomic coverage l Type specimens l Weakness l Presence only data l Often poorly curated l Locality data often lacks precision l Seldom collected in a systematic way l Often not in digital format l Any one collection has limited taxonomic, spatial and temporal coverage

Global Biodiversity Information Facility Observational Data Sets l Strengths l Often presence-absence data l Often collected in a systematic way l Usually precise locality information l Usually in digital format l Weakness l Individual identifications NOT auditable l Generally short time series l Limited taxonomic coverage l Any one data set has limited taxonomic, spatial and temporal coverage

Global Biodiversity Information Facility

TEX (University of Texas at Austin) UADY (University of Yucatan) ARIZ (University of Arizona) CIDIIR (Center of Scientific Research of Durango)

XAL (Institute of Ecology, Xalapa)CAS (California Academy of Sciences) MEXU (National University of Mexico) CICY (Center of Scientific Research of Yucatan)

The Virtual Herbarium of Mexico 700,000 registers from 25 Herbaria In Mexico and the United States.

Global Biodiversity Information Facility “Taken collectively, the plant and animal specimens in the U.S. museum collections provide our most complete picture of the biological diversity of the entire nation.” U.S Dept. of the Interior Electronic National Museum Proposal

Global Biodiversity Information Facility Characteristics of a Megascience Effort l Something that cannot be undertaken by only one country l expense l no one country has access to all the data l Some components of the research can be done at the national or regional levels, but some must be truly global l Usually infrastructural in nature (e.g. CERN) l Involves collaboration among many scientists and others l The topic is hugely inclusive and affects many disciplines

Global Biodiversity Information Facility “Interoperability must be perceived as the sharing of information.” Eliminating Legal and Policy Barriers to Interoperable Government Systems - Electronic Commerce, Law, and Information Policy Strategies Report June 1999

Global Biodiversity Information Facility “ The value of data lies in their use.” Bits of Power – Issues in Global Access to Scientific Data National Academy Press 1997

Global Biodiversity Information Facility

Analysis API Prediction Algorithms Environmental Resources Points to Distributions Server Information Retrieval API Desktop Applications Specimen Databases

Current Environmental Coverages Prediction Tools Point Data Distribution Predicted for Native Region Distribution After Climate Change  Climate Distribution Predicted In Non-native Region Environmental Niche Model Prediction Algorithm (GARP)  Region

Global Biodiversity Information Facility Why share data? l Advantages of sharing core collection data for individual curators l Increased use of collections l Increased justification for funding, collection development, staffing etc. (Use it or lose it) l Advantages of sharing core collection data for individual biodiversity scientists l Making available high quality data for use by others l Helps improve quality of data by making it visible l Increased visibility and relevance of biodiversity community will result in increased funding l Advantages of sharing data for individual institutions l Increase value of collections by increasing access and use l Increased use will increase relavance and result in increased funding l Decrease of staff time answering queries

Global Biodiversity Information Facility “Interoperability must be perceived as the sharing of information.” Eliminating Legal and Policy Barriers to Interoperable Government Systems - Electronic Commerce, Law, and Information Policy Strategies Report June 1999

Global Biodiversity Information Facility “The most profound barriers to interoperability are the soft “human technologies” implied in fundamental policy and organizational design.” Eliminating Legal and Policy Barriers to Interoperable Government Systems - Electronic Commerce, Law, and Information Policy Strategies Report June 1999