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GBIF MONTHLY UPDATE July 2015 GBIF MONTHLY UPDATE July 2015

GBIF MONTHLY UPDATE July 2015 - PowerPoint Presentation

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GBIF MONTHLY UPDATE July 2015 - PPT Presentation

GBIF BY THE NUMBERS 543359405 species occurrence records 14297 datasets 754 datapublishing institutions httpwwwgbiforg 02 JUL 2015 httpwwwgbiforg 02 JUL 2015 ID: 807940

2015 gbif united data gbif 2015 data united research org jul biodiversity science country countries http www species june

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Slide1

GBIF MONTHLY UPDATE

July 2015

Slide2

GBIF BY THE NUMBERS

543,359,405

species

occurrence

records14,297 datasets754data-publishing institutions

http://www.gbif.org | 02 JUL 2015

Slide3

http://www.gbif.org | 02 JUL 2015

GBIF BY THE NUMBERS - JUNE

+

5,443,504

species occurrence records

+

67

datasets

+38data-publishing institutions

Slide4

Latest news

Task groups to help make data more ‘fit for use’ in key research areas

Experts seek to improve fitness of GBIF-mobilized data in

agrobiodiversity

and distribution modelling research.Young Researchers Award winner to help advance development of biodiversity informatics in South Africa Fatima Parker-Allie will seek to develop a curriculum, improve data quality for marine fishes, and model regional distribution of commercial fish species.

Young Researchers Award winner from Colombia to explore historic patterns of Mexican fauna Gonzalo

Pinilla Buitrago will rely on GBIF-mediated records to

analyse species distribution

patterns.

http://www.gbif.org/newsroom/summary | 03 JUL 2015

Slide5

Latest news (continued)

Major increase in Brazilian plant and fungus data shared through GBIF

The volume of data covering Brazil’s rich variety of flora and fungi has seen a massive boost

as

datasets from around 100 of the country’s herbaria, totalling some three million occurrence records, have begun flowing through GBIF.org.Finland launches public test version of new national data portal Laji.fi provides free access to 35 million occurrences for nearly 50,000 species recorded in Finland

Registration open for delegates to 2015 GBIF Governing Board meeting GB22

and the 2015 GBIF Public Symposium will take place on 8-10

October 2015

in Antananarivo, Madagascar.

http://www.gbif.org/newsroom/summary | 03 JUL 2015

Slide6

Data published through GBIf.org

http://www.gbif.org

| 3

JUL 2015

Trend in primary biodiversity records (millions)

data publishing

Slide7

Data published through gbif.org

Negative monthly figures reflect withdrawal of data, usually removal of duplicates.

http

://

www.gbif.org | 03 JUL 2015

data publishing

New species occurrence records (millions)

Month by month,

2015

vs. 2014

Slide8

Data publishers

A sharp rise in the number of data publishers in September 2013 results from institutions choosing to register as separate entities

rather than sharing datasets through a single publisher at their national node institution.

http

://www.gbif.org | 03 JUL 2015

data publishing

Trend in number of institutions

registered as GBIF data publishers

Slide9

Data—by gbif participant

NOTE: Datasets are assigned to countries according to the location of the publishing institution

,

including

aggregated datasets with contributors from many other countries. http://www.gbif.org | 06 JUL 2015

data publishing

1. United States

4,803,135

6. Belgium

2,230,125

2. Sweden

3,522,998

7. Netherlands

2,084,742

3. Brazil

2,999,976

8. Norway

1,854,330

4. United Kingdom

2,378,228

9. Finland

1,736,075

5. Australia

2,260,641

10. Denmark

1,187,322

1. United States

211,398,914

6. Finland

20,157,042

2. Sweden

50,849,201

7. Germany

19,277,954

3. United Kingdom

49,549,616

8. Norway18,798,9174. Australia38,955,3829. France17,489,9425. Netherlands22,691,20610. Spain10,576,218

Number of new records published—Top 10 participant Countries (1 Jan to 30 June 2015)

Total number of records published—Top 10 Participant Countries (as of 30 June 2015)

Slide10

Quarterly Web traffic

use of

gbif.org

1 Apr 2015 – 1 Jul 2015

compared with 1 Apr 2014 – 1 Jul 2014

Rank

Country/Territory

Sessions

% Total Sessions

Prev.

rank

1

United States

147,957

30.93%

1

2

China

25,513

5.33%

2

3

Germany

17,453

3.65%

5

4

India

17,404

3.64%

3

5

Spain

17,022

3.56%

46Brazil16,0043.35%77France15,0433.14%68Mexico14,3703.00%99United Kingdom13,5992.84%810Colombia10,4742.19%10Google Analytics report for GBIF.org: April statistics skewed by errors introduced in late April and resolved in early May. Access available upon request from comms@gbif.org | 06 JUL 2015

Slide11

Visits to GBIF.org by Country

Access

available upon request from

comms@gbif.org

| 06 JUL 2015

use of

gbif.org

1. United States

13,721

6. Spain

4,824

2. China

12,253

7. Mexico

4,459

3. Germany

5,850

8. France

4,449

4. Brazil

5,491

9. United Kingdom

4,082

5. India

5,185

10. Italy

3,145

June 2015

Slide12

Data download requests, by country

Requests for download do not necessarily result in data actually being downloaded. Based on country indicated by user login

| 06 JUL 2015

use of

gbif.org

1. Mexico

9,591

6. Spain

2,915

2. United States

6,914

7. United

Kingdom

2,078

3. Denmark

4,319

8. Colombia

1,868

4. China

4,262

9. Ecuador

1,767

5. Brazil

3,872

10. France

1,533

Total of

50,177 requests

from

5161

users

in

128 countries, islands and territories

1 Jan 2015 – 30 June 2015

Slide13

Citations in peer-reviewed research 06 JUL 2015

research use

Annual number of peer-reviewed publications

using GBIF-mediated data

Slide14

Use citations, by country of authors

06 JUL 2015

research use

Total 2015

Number of research publications from January

to June 2015

citing use of GBIF-mediated data, ranked by country according to affiliation of

author. Top ten countries shown.

June

2015

June 2015

Number of research publications

in June 2015

citing use of

GBIF

-mediated data, ranked by country according to affiliation of

author.

Top ten

countries

shown.

1. United States

80

5. Australia

15

2. United Kingdom

38

6. China

14

3. Germany

21

7. Spain

13

3. Mexico218. Belgium

124. Brazil188. Colombia121. United States135. Australia22. United Kingdom55. Canada22. Spain55. China23. Mexico4

5. Germany

2

4. Brazil35. Netherlands

2

Slide15

Research Examples

Carvalho

AF & Del Lama MA.

Predicting priority areas for conservation from historical climate

modelling: stingless bees from Atlantic Forest hotspot as a case study. Journal of Insect Conservation. Author country: Brazil

Kong X, Huang M &

Duan

R.

SDMdata: A web-based software tool for collecting species occurrence records

. PLoS ONE. Author country: ChinaLeidenberger S, Obst M, Kulawik R,

et al

.

Evaluating the potential of ecological niche

modelling

as a component in marine non-indigenous species risk assessments

. Marine Pollution Bulletin. Author countries: Sweden, Germany, United

Kingdom

Mylne

AQN,

Pigott

DM,

Longbottom

J,

et al

.

Mapping the zoonotic niche of Lassa fever in Africa

. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine & Hygiene. Author countries: United Kingdom, United States

A complete archive of research citing used of GBIF can be accessed at

http://www.mendeley.com/groups/1068301/gbif-public-library

06 JUL 2015

research use

June 2015

Slide16

Park DS & Potter D.

Why close relatives make bad

neighbours

: phylogenetic conservatism in niche preferences and dispersal disproves Darwin's naturalization hypothesis in the thistle tribe

. Molecular Ecology. Author country: United StatesSilva DP, Varela S,

Nemésio A, et al

.

Adding biotic interactions into

paleodistribution

models: A host-cleptoparasite complex of Neotropical orchid bees. PLoS ONE. Author countries: Brazil, Germany

Werner GDA, Cornwell WK,

Cornelissen

JHC,

et al

.

Evolutionary signals of symbiotic persistence in the legume–rhizobia mutualism

. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Author countries: Netherlands,

Australia

Willis KJ,

Seddon

AWR, Long PR,

et al

.

Remote assessment of locally important ecological features across landscapes: how representative of reality?

Ecological Applications. Author countries: United Kingdom, Norway

Research Examples

(continued)

June 2015

research use

A complete archive of research citing used of GBIF can be accessed at

http://www.mendeley.com/groups/1068301/gbif-public-library

06 JUL 2015

Slide17

Number of GBIF Participants

3 MAR 2015

participation

2001-2015

MOU 2001-2006

MOU 2007-2011

MOU 2012

Slide18

Map of GBIF Country Participants03 MAR 2015

participation

Slide19

GBIF Participant LisT

* Signature of 2012 MoU pending, previous status shown

|

http://www.gbif.org/participation/

list2 MAR 2015

participation

Voting Participants

Andorra

Argentina

*AustraliaBelgium

Benin

Burkina Faso

Chile

Colombia

Costa Rica

Denmark

Estonia

Finland

France

Germany

Ghana

Iceland

Ireland

Kenya

Madagascar

Mauritania

Mexico

Netherlands

New Zealand

Norway

Peru

Portugal

Republic of Korea

Slovakia *

Slovenia * South AfricaSpainSwedenTanzaniaTogoUganda United KingdomUnited StatesUruguayAssociate Country ParticipantsAustriaBrazilCanadaCentral African RepublicGuineaIndiaIndonesia *IsraelJapanLuxembourgMalawiPakistanPhilippines PolandRepublic of CongoSwitzerland *

Other Associate ParticipantsASEAN Centre for Biodiversity (ACB)Albertine Rift Conservation Society (ARCOS)Biodiversity Heritage LibraryBioNET-AndionetBioNET-INTERNATIONALBioversity InternationalBotanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI)CanadensysChinese Academy of SciencesChinese TaipeiCiencia y Tecnología para el Desarrollo (CYTED)Consortium for the Barcode of Life (CBOL)Consortium of European Taxonomic Facilities (CETAF)Discover LifeEncyclopedia of Life (EOL)Endangered Wildlife Trust (EWT)European Environment Agency (EEA)ICLEI – Local Governments for SustainabilityInter-American Biodiversity Information Network (IABIN)Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS)International Barcode of Life Consortium (iBOL)International Centre for Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE)International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD)International Long-Term Ecological Research Network (ILTER)Naturalis Biodiversity CenterNatural Science Collections Alliance (NSCA)NatureServeNordGenPacific Biodiversity Information Forum (PBIF)PlaziScientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR)Society for the Management of Electronic Biodiversity Data (SMEBD)Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections (SPNHC)Species 2000TDWGUNEP-WCMCVertNetWildscreenWorld Federation for Culture Collections (WFCC)GBIF AffiliatesData Observation Network for Earth (DataOne)International Oceanographic Commission of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (IOC/UNESCO)

Feb 2015

Slide20

Sources of funding

02 MAR 2015

support

Andorra

Institute

d’estudis

Andorrans

Argentina

CONICET – Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Técnicas

Australia

Atlas of Living Australia, CSIRO National Research Collections Australia

Belgium

Belgian Federal Science Policy Office (

belspo

)

Benin

Laboratoire des Sciences Forestières

Chile

Comisión Nacional del Medio Ambiente (CONAMA)

Colombia

Instituto de Investigación de Recursos Biólogicos Alexander von Humboldt

Costa Rica

Asociación Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad (INBio)

Denmark

The Danish Agency for Science, Technology and Innovation

Estonia

Ministry of Environment

Finland

Academy of Finland

France

Direction Générale pour la Recherche et l

Innovation (DGRI)

Germany

Deutsche

Forschungsgemeinschaft

(DFG) , German Aerospace Center, BMBF

Ghana

Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR)

Iceland

Ministry for the Environment and Natural Resources

Ireland

National Parks & Wildlife Service

Kenya

National Museums of Kenya

Madagascar

Centre National de Recherches sur l

Environnement (CNRE)

Mauritania

École Normale Supérieure de Nouakchott

Mexico

Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACYT)

Netherlands

Ministry of Education, Culture and Science

New Zealand

Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment

Norway

The Research Council of Norway

Peru

Ministerio

del

Ambiente

Portugal

Foundation for Science and Technology

Republic of Korea

Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning

Slovak Republic

Ministry of the Environment

Slovenia

Ministry of Higher Education, Science and Technology

South Africa

Department of Science and Technology

Sweden

Swedish Research Council

Tanzania

Tanzania Commission for Science and Technology (COSTECH)

Uganda

Uganda National Council for Science and Technology

United Kingdom

Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA)

Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)

Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

Natural History Museum, London

Joint Nature Conservation Committee

Uruguay

Dirección

de

Innovación

,

Ciencia

y

Tecnología

para

el

Desarrollo

(DICYT)

USA

National Science Foundation

Smithsonian Institution

U.S. Department of State

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Agencies

contributing

to GBIF

core

funds

Supplementary

funding

University of Copenhagen (IT equipment)

I

4Life

Eye on Earth

OpenUp!EU BONGIASIP, CBDGBIO 4, CBDEMODNET Biology 2ViBRANTBiodiversity Information Fund for Asia (BIFA) - Ministry of the Environment of JapanBiodiversity Information for Development (BID) - EU

Note on Agencies

Voting Participants that have

financially contributed or declared their

intention

to contribute

to GBIF core funds within

the period of January 2014 until present

.

Note on

Supplementary funding

Projects or agencies that contributed or

declared their intention to contribute to

GBIF supplementary funds within the period of January

2014

until present.

Slide21

Current affiliations

Partner

Biodiversity Indicators Partnership

(BIP)

Member, Dialogue group

Biodiversity Knowledge Network for the European Union

(KNEU)

Observer

Convention on Biological Diversity

(CBD)

Observer

Convention on Migratory Species

Council

Encyclopedia of Life

(EOL)

Participant

European

Biodiversity

Observation Network

(EU BON)

Partner

Eye on Earth Biodiversity Special Initiative

Member, Steering committee

Global Genome Biodiversity Network

(GGBN)

Partner

Global Invasive Alien Species Information Partnership

(GIASIP)

Partner

Global Partnership for Plant Conservation

(GPPC)

Participant

Group on Earth Observations

(GEO)

Member, Advisory Board

Group on Earth Observations Biodiversity Observation Network (GEO-BON)Observer Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity & Ecosystem Services (IPBES)Associate data unitIOC-UNESCO International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange/Ocean Biogeographic Information System (IODE/OBIS)Member, Policy & Science BoardLifeWatch10 APR 2015support