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About Us

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facilitating study of potential impacts on threatened species ... Synchronization of physical and biological data through time ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: About Us


1
OBISSEAMAP mapping marine megavertebrates
http//obis.env.duke.edu Andy Read, Pat Halpin,
Larry Crowder, David Hyrenbach, Ben Best, Sloan
Freeman, Christoph Spoerri
  • About Us
  • Spatial Ecological Analysis of
  • Megavertebrate Populations
  • Why?
  • Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS)
    node devoted to large marine vertebrates birds,
    mammals, and turtles
  • Objectives
  • To augment understanding of marine
    megavertebrates by
  • facilitating study of potential impacts on
    threatened species
  • enhancing ability to test models about diversity
    and biogeography
  • supporting models to predict future responses to
    environmental change
  • Who?
  • Growing number of international partners led by
    Duke University
  • Architecture
  • Design a full service provider for a diverse
    array of users
  • For Users
  • Tools to search, subset, and export data in
    various formats
  • For Providers
  • Products
  • One central data base with multiple distinct
    views
  • Search
  • Support data searching by species name, location
    and time
  • Browse
  • Allows users to browse the different data sets
    individually
  • Species Profiles
  • Applications
  • Within a broader scientific, resource management
    and conservation context
  • Mapping
  • Visualization of biological data, in conjunction
    with oceanographic background.
  • Pilot Projects
  • Demonstrate utility of system, within context of
    biogeographic and conservation storylines
  • Help prioritize data needs and the tool
    development
  • Provide synthetic atlas to identify
    information gaps
  • Future
  • Developing New Tools and Partnerships
  • New Technologies
  • Synchronization of physical and biological data
    through time
  • Use of open standards for distributing more
    complex data such as lines and polygons
  • Habitat use / home range analysis
  • Automated retrieval of taxonomic hierarchies
  • New Partnerships
  • TOPPBy increasing interaction with the animal
    tracking and wildlife telemetry communities, a
    more seamless transition between animal data
    collection, analysis and archival processes will
    be created.
  • UNEP-WCMC We are
    continuing collaborations with international
    partners to share data and resources.
  • Sponsored by

First Annual Data Provider Meeting, May1-2
2003members from SMRU, Cascadia Research, Duke
University, Seaturtle.org, NOAA Biogeography, UNC
Wilmington, Office of Naval Research, NOAA
Sanctuaries, NMFS, Allied Whale, CORE, British
Antarctic Survey, UC Santa Cruz,TOPP, Sir Alister
Hardy Foundation for Ocean Science, University of
New England, Allied Whale, and WhaleNet
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Global pelagic longline fishing effort (1990s)
Source Sloan Freeman, Duke Marine Lab
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