Title: Building a Global Drylands Information System:
1Building a Global Drylands Information System
A Collaborative Approach
IALC Conference and Workshop Assessing
Capabilities of Soil and Water Resources in
Drylands The Role of Information Retrieval and
Dissemination Technologies October 20-25, 2002
2The Beginnings of Formal Arid Lands Research
- University of Arizona
- Interdisciplinary tradition dating
- from 1891
- Interests in unique Arizona environment
- Carnegie Desert Botanical Laboratory, 1903
- UNESCO, Arid Zone Advisory Committee (1950s)
- American Association for the Advancement of
Science (1950s) - Series of meetings held in the Southwest
3Arid Lands Research at the University of Arizona
- The Advisory Committee for Arid
- Lands Research, 1957
- Rockefeller Grant, 1959
- Army Research Office Grant, 1964
- To conduct an inventory of the worlds desert
environments - Institute of Arid Lands Research became the
Office of Arid Lands Studies, 1964
4Office of Arid Lands Studies
- Divisions and Programs
- Natural Products Center
- economic botany and health in arid
- environments
- Arizona Remote Sensing Center
- remote sensing GIS applications
- Desert Research Unit
- water conservation and reuse
- Economic Development Program
- Arid Lands Information Center
5 Arid Lands Information Center
- Mission To utilize the most cost-effective and
universal means to provide access to information
on the worlds arid regions - Specialized information services
- Document collection
- Publications
- Databases
- Technical assistance
- Web site development
6Reliance on Technology
- Early Adopters from the Start
- ALIS the original Arid Lands
Information System (1970s) - Mainframe database management system
- Search for Cost-Effective Means to Disseminate
information - Microcomputer systems (1980s)
- CD-ROMs
- Internet and World Wide Web (1990s)
7New Type of Projects
- Collaborative and interdisciplinary
- Multiple partners multiple sponsors
- Focus on a variety of user needs
- Leverage previous inputs
8The University of Arizona AgNIC Project and Some
of its Offspring
9The History of ALIS
- Original idea for a global arid lands information
system, print-based, circa 1970 - Computerized bibliographic database
- Arid Lands Thesaurus
- Information papers
- Arid Lands Newsletter
- Vision for satellite-based system
- Link research centers worldwide
10Technology to the Rescue
- The World Wide Web ah ha!
- Discussions officially begin among ALIC staff in
1995 - Results a document for an OASIS
- Time marches on
- Piecemeal development
- Various name changes
- Web-site development
experience -
11Where it Fits in Todays Critical Needs
- World Bank Development Report 2003
- Major challenges
- improve livelihoods on fragile lands
- sustainable management of renewable natural
resources - Implications invest in initiatives thatensure
systematic learning
12More Critical Needs
- National Research Council Grand Challenges in
Environmental Sciences, 2001 - Biological diversity and ecosystem functioning
- Land-use dynamics
- Climate variability
- Recommendations
- Establish research centers support
interdisciplinary research make science useful
to decision-makers, managers, and the public - International data harmonization
13GEO 3
- Underlying Key Areas for Action
- greater provision of and access to information
in all its forms as the fundamental basis of
successful planning and decision-making - Major Challenges Include
- Threats to biodiversity
- Land degradation
- Pressures on/growth of urban areas
- Human vulnerability to environmental change
14Our Current Vision
- Make Science Practical
- Integrate science, data, applications,
and location specific information
and resources to facilitate
learning and decision-making - Provide interpretive information and resources
for multiple levels and types of users - Identify and work to fill knowledge gaps
- Build Services around Collaborations, Previous
Inputs, Technology, and Established Standards
15A Prototype Home Page for the Portal
16Combining Science/Research, Data/Tools,
Applications
17Geo-Spatial Access
18Sample Desert-Specific Module
19In-Depth Analysis of Desert Region
20Operational Issues for Collaboration
- Technical Architecture
- Data Integration
- Information and Content
- Accessibility
- Intellectual Property
- General Management and Sustainability
- Operating procedures for collaborators
- Funding options
21Research Areas
- Acquisition and conversion of data and metadata
- Compatibility issues
- Identification and collection of
data to fill information gaps - Analysis and synthesis of data and information
- Models, comparisons, interpretations
- Dissemination of data and metadata
- User interfaces
- Visualizations, simulations, GIS applications
22Credits
- Barbara Hutchinson, Director
- Carla Casler, Assistant Director
- Michael Haseltine, Web Designer Systems Support
- Katherine Waser, Editor Web Site Manager
- Heather Severson, Web Designer
- Anne Thwaits, Web Graphics Designer
- Bill Becker, Student Library Assistant
23Discussion Questions
- Session One
- Who are the primary user groups for a drylands
information system and what types of information,
data, and resources are needed by each potential
user group? - What organizations should be involved in
developing such a system and what specific
resources do these organizations bring to such a
system?
24Discussion Questions
- Session Two
- What are the benefits of collaboration and are
there some tasks where collaboration is not
useful? - What are the barriers to collaboration?
- What are the technical issues that should be
addressed?
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26Discussion Questions
- Session Three
- What is needed to make such collaborations
happen? - What are possible funding options for developing
a collaborative drylands information system? - What are the next steps?