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BioNET-INTERNATIONAL

BioNET-INTERNATIONAL. Update for IV IABIN Council Meeting Panamá City, April 2005. BioNET basics. Founded in 1993 …to promote taxonomic capacity building for less industrialized countries

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BioNET-INTERNATIONAL

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  1. BioNET-INTERNATIONAL Update for IV IABIN Council Meeting Panamá City, April 2005

  2. BioNET basics • Founded in 1993…to promote taxonomic capacity building for less industrialized countries • Strategy: tying taxonomy to development, conservation and policy processes for the long-term strengthening of the taxonomic sector • Assists countries with establishment and facilitation of local partnerships for capacity building (LOOPs) • Individual members in 153 countries • 10 LOOPs, formally endorsed by over 100 countries • Global and regional partnerships via participation / membership of IUCN, GBIF, IFS, Ecoagriculture, IABIN, GISP, GPPC/GSPC, etc.…and the Global Taxonomy Initiative.

  3. BioNETexternal review 2004 • Swiss government commissioned a Review in 2004 (IUCN, UNEP, others) • Conclusions: • Significant contributions to capacity building • Very good value for money • Important advocate for taxonomy among policy makers and funders • Secretariat should continue • LOOPs show sustainability is possible • Potential for growth and diversification

  4. BioNET objectives • LOOPs – Locally Owned and Operated Partnerships • Collections - biological and literature • Information and information sharing • Training – taxonomists / parataxonomists / curators etc. • Development and dissemination of technology • Sustainability of network, lasting impact of new capacity • A UK/USA based Secretariat: • Building partnerships, donor relations for LOOPs • Advocacy for capacity building in taxonomy • Coordination of global network

  5. Project implementation partnerships • LOOP leadership and coordination roles in wide range of programmes: • International Pollinator Initiative (African coordination) • Botanical and Zoological network (GEF, E Africa) • ASEAN Plant Health Network (SE Asia) • SP-IPM (CGIAR, world-wide) • GISIN (Steering Committee) • CariPestNet (Hosting Pestnet in the Caribbean)

  6. BioNET, the CBD andthe Global Taxonomy Intiative • GTI: depends on capacity building (CBD Decision VI/8) • Parties to the CBD have identified the following GTI roles BioNET can support: • Needs identification • Capacity building • Collaboration • Regional cooperation • GTI Coordination Mechanism • BioNET – CBD Secretariat, Memorandum of Cooperation, 2004: GTI, CHM, Biosafety and Technology Transfer

  7. BioNET and IABIN • An IABIN participant: • LOOPs as technical partners • Secretariat membership of I3N TWG • Biodiversity informatics and the taxonomic sector are interdependent • BioNET wants to see solutions to the taxonomic impediment, not to build empires • IABIN, as GBIF, is a very welcome initiative, one that didn’t exist when BioNET was conceived • Informatics needs and potential for action are immense – BioNET wants IABIN to succeed! • Sustainability of LOOPs is a critical challenge – experiences to share with IABIN • Invite Focal Points to call on LOOP coordinators to assist with IABIN activities

  8. BioNETStatus in Americas and Caribbean • CARINET: established(Regional Coordinator: Ronald Barrow, Trinidad and Tobago) • AndinoNET: established(Regional Coordinator: José Clavijo, Venezuela) • MesoAmeriNET: proposal under consideration • Southern Cone (LATINET):preparing for founding workshop in 2005

  9. AndinoNET 1 • Founding workshop 2002; Operational since 2003 • Proposal endorsed by: • Bolivia: Viceministro de Recursos Naturales y Medio Ambiente • Colombia: Viceministro de Ambiente • Perú: Jefa de la unidad de Biodiversidod y Bioseguridod (CONAM) • Venezuela: Ministro de Ciencias y Tecnologia

  10. AndinoNET 2 • Coordinating Committee – Coordinators from: • Bolivia: Dra Mónica Moraes, Herbario Nacional, Universidad Mayor de San Andrés • Colombia: Dr Gonzalo Andrade / Dra Gloria Galeano, Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional • Peru: Dr Jose Santisteban, Museo Nacional de Historia Natural, Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina • Venezuela: Prof José (Pepe) Clavijo (national and regional coordinator), Museo del Instituto de Zoologia Agricola Francisco Fernandez, Universidad Central de Venezuela • http://www.miza-fpolar.info.ve/andinonet/

  11. AndinoNET 3 • Work plan for BioNET-SDC seed funding ($80K) approved 2004 • Some 2004-5 activities supported by seed funding and other sources: • Training workshop - Taxonomy of Neotropical Tabanidae Participants from 13 entomology / public health institutions in Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela. Partners: Consejo de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (CDCH) and the Universidad Central de Venezuela (UCV) • Palm group - 1st meeting at World Palm Symposium in London this week • Online keys - Lepidoptera • Technical contributions to CariPestNet • Training of Colombian in taxonomy of Odonata • Represented BioNET at Barcoding of Life Conference.

  12. AndinoNET 4 • Some plans for 2005: • Training workshops: 1) Taxonomy of Neotropical Muscidae (Insecta: Diptera) 2) Taxonomy of Palms of economic importance in the Andes Region. • Barcoding of Life: pest moths of Solanacae. • AndinoNET invites experts and institutions to become members, especially those interested coordinating new thematic working groups.

  13. CARINET 1 • Established 1993 by endorsement of CARICOM, the Caribbean Community. Received $150K of BioNET-SDC seed funding. • Members: Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Grenada, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Montserrat, St Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Surinam, Trinidad & Tobago and other Windward and Leeward Islands • Coordinating Committee: • National coordinators from each country. • Regional coordination from Trinidad & Tobago by Ron Barrow. http://carinet.ecoport.org

  14. CARINET 2 • Some activities in 2004: • Training workshops: arthropod pest identification for Plant quarantine personnel of Trinidad & Tobago • Invasive alien species: Malacology survey and training with to address Giant African Snail. USDA/APHIS. • Integrated Pest Management:The Enhancement of the Diagnostic Capabilities in the Identification of pests and their natural enemies.European Union. • Identification and diagnostics: • Launched CariPestNet, online provider of free pest identification and crop protection information. CTA supported. • Identification service: more than 30 requests from member countries, mainly for insects, including 7 first time records from the sub-region. Supported by Florida State Collections of Arthropods. http://carinet.ecoport.org

  15. CARINET 3 • Coordination now self-sustaining • Some key partners: CTA, IICA, FAO • Early thematic focus has been on agriculture and insects, now also invasives and invertebrate biodiversity surveys. • Interested in seeing CARINET diversify now that there is much wider recognition (GTI) of taxonomic needs for IAS, etc. http://carinet.ecoport.org

  16. http://carinet.ecoport.org

  17. MesoAmeriNET • Founding workshop hosted by Government of Guatemala, November 2003 • Agreed proposal, priorities and strategy for submission to governments • Endorsed by governments of • El Salvador. Coordinator: Enrique Barraza, Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales • Costa Rica. Coordinator: Lic. Cecilia Pineda C., Museo Nacional de Costa Rica. • Active consideration of proposal by Guatemala • Regional Coordinator: Alvaro Herrero, INBio

  18. “LATINET” – a LOOP for the Southern Cone? • Workshop planned for 2005 • Organising committee chaired by Dra Mercedes Lizarralde de Grosso, Presidente, Sociedad Entomologica, Argentina • Hosting and co-organisation: Ministry of Exterior Affairs, Exterior Commerce and Culture, Republic of Argentina • UNESCO have offered technical and some financial support • Seeking other sponsors / event to hold in conjunction

  19. Whytaxonomy matters

  20. Why Taxonomy Matterscase studies – the sectors Agriculture fisheries aquaculture forestry pest management biocontrol invasive alien species pollinators tourism trade biodiversity conservation forensics transportation engineering construction food safety health (human and animal) herbal medicine horticulture…

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