Title: Frequently Used Icons
1GIS and Gardens Symposium
. . . Building a Community of GIS users in
Botanical and Zoological Gardens
2This Meeting is About GIS, GPS, Geography and
Sharing Our Knowledge about its Application in
Gardens
- Technology
- Methods
- Organization
- Data
- Processes
- And About You
Visualization
Mapping
Data Model
Data Compilation
Image Processing
Systems
Web Service
. . . And Your Work
3Your Work is Creating a New Approach
. . . Improving How We Create and Manage Our
Future
4Gardens are Special Places . . . .With Many
Missions
- A Physical Institution
- Facilities Design and Planning, Construction,
Managing Utilities, Roads, Trails, Irrigation
Systems . . . - Landscape Management Plants, Soils,
Fertilizers, Pests, Disasters - Visitor Management Education, Exhibits,
Services, Programs - Development Membership Demographics, Endowments,
Events - A Scientific Institution
- Taxonomic Research
- Species Informatics Data Models, Standards and
Interchange - Field Ecology Species Distribution and Natural
History - A Place for Conservation
- Preservation of Species
- Conservation Research
- (Sustainable Development, Species Survival,
Climate Change) - Educational Institution
- Self Learning
- Classes
California Academy of Sciences
5GIS is Helping Make Garden Institutions More
Successful
- Better Management of Living Collections and
Related Facilities - Digital Inventory of Complete Collections
- Location
- History
- Environmental Conditions Greater Efficiency,
Lower Costs, - Better Communication Visualization, Mapping ,
Reports. . . - Framework For Planning
- Lower Costs / Efficiencies
- Better Science
- Mapping Patterns
- Modeling Ecology
- Improving Services
- Conservation
- Web Communication
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-
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Rancho Santa Ana Botanical GardensSan Diego
Zoological Society
6Design Planning
San Diego Zoological Society
- Using GIS, the Morrison Woodland Garden
- was redeveloped to add a wheelchair accessible
- boardwalk and a series of viewing decks.
Santa Ana Zoo
Rancho Santa Ana Botanical Gardens
Royal Botanical Garden, Canada
Many of our projects would have been much more
time-consuming, and some may not have been
possible, without the incorporation of
GIS. -Margaret WaltonGIS Coordinator, RBG
7Facilities management
- Missouri
- Botanical
- Garden
San Diego Zoological Society
,San Diego Zoo
8Landscape Management
- Plant Records
- Facility Base Map
- Data Capture Tools
- Analysis
- Reports Information Products
- Usefulness for Facility Planning and Exhibit
Development
National Tropical Botanical Garden
9Horticulture Management
Tree Canopy Cover, Royal Botanical Gardens
Melbourne
Missouri Botanical Garden
10Disaster Management Damage Assessment
High-impact Wind Areas Florida
Fire Los Angeles
Fire History San Diego
Missouri Botanical Garden
11Visitor Services
Huntington Botanical Gardens
12Visitor Materials
UC Davis ArboretumOTS La Selva
13Endowment Planning
- RBG maintains a database of memorialized trees,
rocks, and benches dedicated by donor, and GIS
has been used to map the existing memorials and
potential new sites.
Royal Botanical Garden, Canada
14Zoological Horticulture
San Diego Zoological Society
15Biodiversity Conservation
American Museum of Natural History
16Species information Networks
University of California Berkeley REBIOMA
Madagascar Wildlife Conservation Society
17Species Distribution Mapping
Botanical Research Institute of Texas, Andes to
Amazon Biodiversity Project
18Research - Estimating The Geographic Distribution
of SpeciesBased on Herbarium Specimens
19Species Range Mapping
Missouri Botanical Garden
20Species Conservation Samburu Reserve
Save the Elephants, Kenya
21GIS Modeling / Conservation Planning Elephant
Corridors and Streaking
Species Survival
Jake Wall, Save the Elephants
22GIS Modeling / Conservation Planning Tree
kangaroo Conservation Program
Species Survival
Woodland Park Zoo, Tree kangaroo Project
23Sustainable Communities
Woodland Park Zoo, Tree kangaroo ProjectLimbe
Botanic Garden CameroonMt. Cameroon Project
24Zoological Science
San Diego Zoological Society
25Visualization
MaNIS Project
26Biodiversity AtlasesVegetation Atlas for
Madagascar
- Atlas will help Madagascar plan a more
sustainable future. - Map-based vegetation information system within
ArcGIS
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
27Biodiversity AtlasesVegetation Atlas for
Madagascar
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
28Collaborative ScienceVegetation Atlas for
Madagascar
What can we see from imagery
Expert Knowledge input
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
29Our World Has Many Problems to Solve
2050
- Growing Population
- Global Warming
- Social Conflicts
- Resource Shortages
- Loss of Biodiversity
- Security
Land Cover
2002
Population Density
- We Need
- Greater Knowledge Awareness
- Comprehensive Planning
- Collaborative Action
UNEP
We Need to Change We Need a New Approach
30The World Needs an Approach That Changes How We
See Things . . .
. . . And the Way We Do Things
Patterns
Relationships
Deciding
Significance
Designing
Our Understanding
Managing
Restoring
Consequences
Our Behavior
Implications
Human
Nature
Helping
Protecting
Developing
Regulating
31Geography Is the Science of Our WorldHelping Us
See the World
As a Living Whole
And How We Are Part of Its Evolution
As a Network Of Interrelated Systems
. . . Providing a Context for Understanding
32The Geographic ApproachA Framework for
Understanding and Managing Our Earth
Geographic Knowledge
Creating Measuring Organizing Analyzing Modeling
Holistic Comprehensive Systematic Analytic Visual
Applying Planning Designing Deciding Managing Acti
ng
Integrating Geography Into How We Behave
33GIS Applies the Geographic ApproachProviding
Tools, Methods, and Workflows That Support
Collaboration and Action
Work Flow
Storing
Analyzing
Measuring
Visualizing
Integration
Acting
Spatial Analysis
- Better Decisions
- Greater Efficiency
- (Money/Time/Resources)
- More EffectiveCommunication
Collaboration
. . . Improving the Way We Do Things
34GIS is Being Applied Across Many Disciplines,
Professions and Organizations
Becoming an Instrument of Evolution . . .
35What is a GIS?Software Technology for Managing
and Applying Geographic Information
- Supporting
- Rich Data Model
- Data Management
- Strong Tools
- Data Compilation
- Data Integration
- Analysis / Modeling
- Mapping / Visualization
- Applications and Workflows
. . . And Knowledgeable Users
36GIS Organizes and Manages Geographic
KnowledgeSix Basic Types
Geoprocessing Models
Maps Visualization
Geographic Data
Geospatial Work flows
Data Models
Meta Data
Geodatabase
. . . Useful Building Blocks that Can Be Shared
and Applied
37GIS Implementations Follow Common Patterns
Multi-User
Desktop
Federated
- Shared Database
- Fixed Applications
- Transactions
Work-Groups
- Ad Hoc Projects
- Analysis/Modeling/Mapping
- Integration
- Sharing
- Collaboration
Professional
Organizations
38The Web Provides a New Pattern for Sharing GIS
Information
- Supporting
- Collaborative Efforts
- Mashups
- User Contributed Content
-
GeoWeb
Distributed Collaboration
Map Services
- Many Participants
- Interconnected
- Interoperable
- Integrative
- Dynamic
Web 2.0
Web 1.0
39GIS Professionals are Also Using The Web
PlatformContributing Rich Content and Building
Powerful Applications
- Publishing Authoritative Knowledge
- Building Professional Systems
Use
Web Users
Sensor Network (GRSS)
GIS Users
Georeferenced Content
Author
Base Maps Globes
Integrating Professional GIS with Everything on
the Web
40Many ImprovementsProviding Many New Capabilities
Innovations
- Making Users More Productive
- Mapping
- Visualization
- Animation
- Charting
- Integrating Time
- Modeling
- Spatial Analysis
- Data Management
- Interoperability
- Web Services
- Server Architecture
41GIS Servers are Providing A New PlatformServing
Geographic Knowledge as Web Services
Rich Functionality
Data Management Mapping Visualization Geoprocessin
g Applications Development Mobile
Making GIS Knowledge Available To Anyone . . .
. . . Integrates With Other Systems Via
Standards
42Supporting Mobile Applications A Lightweight
Client for the Field/Use
- Runs On Many Devices
- Phones
- PDAs
- Laptops
- Supports
- Mapping
- Editing
- Query
- GPS
Application
Includes development kit forcustom applications
. . . Synchronized with Geodatabase
43 GIS Servers Supports MashupsIntegrating GIS
Services with Consumer Mapping and Visualization
Services
Helping Users Tell Stories in Internet Map Sites
. . . . . . And Integrating Web Content
into GIS
44Successful ImplementationRequires More Than
Technology
- Vision and Leadership
- Management Support
- Organizational Model
- Planning
- Technical Architecture
- Data Models
- Organization
- Implementation Work
- Good People
- . . . And a Spirit of Collaboration
45Other Thoughts about Gardens and GIS
46Gardens and GIS in the FutureOur World is
Changing Rapidly
Population Density
- Climate Change is a major threat to Plants. . .
- Habitat and ecosystem sustainability
- Disturbance Regimes (flood, fire, estuarine)
- Terrestrial habitats will shift northward and
upslope - Protected area boundaries cannot shift
- Human settlement surrounding natural areas also
cannot shift - We need knowledge about managing native species
in climates outside their normal survivability. - When plants can no longer survive in their native
locations unaided . . . - . . . conservation shifts from being an
ecological Protection effort one to being a
horticultural one. - This knowledge will come from biologists and
horticulturalists, aided by spatial analysis
tools.
CO2 Emissions
. . . Gardens Will Be Centers of This Knowledge
47Future GIS Climate Driven Extinction Modeling
. . .And Planning for Translocation
Agrostis baccillata
Salix bebbiana
Future predicted distribution
Future predicted distribution
Current predicted distribution
California Academy of Sciences
48 . . . Gardens will be Conservation
Advocates and Models For How We Manage Our Planet
Gardens and GIS in the FutureConservation of
Nature will Be Increasingly Needed
- Humans are Impacting terrestrial Landscapes -
dams, development, pollution and fire
suppression. - Humans can decide what will happen to natural
communities in the future - The will to act for nature will depend on the
success of institutions teaching citizens and
voters about biology, nature and climate change. - As the world urbanizes, there is less connection
to nature, biology and evolution. - The role of public gardens will be to Provide
knowledge and understanding of the natural world
in the context of orderly scientific inquiry. - GIS will Help
Rancho Santa Ana Botanical Garden
49Gardens and GIS in the FutureWe Need New Social
Communities
- GIS users have spontaneously formed communities
with remarkably consistent values - Public Service oriented, helping one another
- Sharing data, innovation and Ideas
- Engaged in helping teach the public support
special projects - GIS Corp., The Society for Conservation GIS, PUG,
EGUG and hundreds of geo- user groups - Supporting
- Community projects, grants, scholarships,
conferences and training - Annual Scientific Professional Meetings
- Publications and Initiatives
- ... All without any staff or offices, just
relying on volunteers. - The Gardens GIS User is a Beginning
Gardens will create Centers of Community action
California Academy of SciencesFairchild Tropical
Garden
50Your Work With GIS is Already Helping
- Supporting
- Systematic Inventories
- Improved Facilities Management
- Scientific Research
- Educational Outreach
- Better Horticulture Practices
- Better Programs
. . . Improving Best Practices With More
Comprehensive Information
51What More Can Be Done?
- Create A Community of Professionals Focused
Application of GIS in Gardens - Sharing Best Practices
- Approaches
- Data Models
- Applications
- Collaborations
- Research
- Outreach / Education
- Annual Meetings
-
-
. . . . Evolving and Sharing New Methods and
Best Practices
- ESRI Will Support You . . .
- . . . Software Grants, Training And Technical
Support -
52Our World Has Many Problems . . .
Gardens Will Increasingly Play a Role in
Societies Understanding of Nature The
geographic approach is important . . . For
Organizing, Understanding and Managing GIS
technology is beginning to make a difference . .
. changing the way we see and do things But,
more than technology is required . . . it will
take vision, dedication and hard
work Garden professionals working together
. . . can implement this new approach . .
. and create a more sustainable future for
everyone
"Never doubt that a small group of committed
people can change history. Indeed it's the only
thing that ever has" -Margaret Mead
53Application Ideas For Discussion
- GIS as the Back office System Managing Work
- Facilities Management
- Work Orders
- Strategic Decision Making and Cost Analysis
54Application Ideas For Discussion
- The Visitor Centered Garden
- Community Mapping Projects
- K-12 or 4-H GIS programs
- Web-based GIS permits citizens to give you
feedback - GIS as a gateway to real world conservation
55Application Ideas For Discussion
- Raising Funds and Capital Campaigns (Major
Facility Improvements) - Donor Stewardship
- Membership and Event Marketing
- Event Management
- Construction Management
56Benefits of GISSharing of Scientific Data
- The Scientific Analysis Using GIS
- Tracking Research Use and Published Work
- Collaborative Data Sharing
- Potential links between in situ and ex situ
managers
57Benefits of GISFunding a GIS
- Key Issues for Decision Makers
- Wheres the Sweet Spot?
- Leveraging Your Investment
- Finding the Money
- Lowering the Cost
- A Staffing Plan
- Fast, Flexible, Friendly, Focused Project
Management - Future directions for GIS in a Where 2.0 (and Web
2.0) world