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Challenge Grant Update April 19, 2006 Douglas Sellers, NatureServe Janice Miller, WA DNR

Challenge Grant Update April 19, 2006 Douglas Sellers, NatureServe Janice Miller, WA DNR. About the Grant Partners Status of Grant Activities Unique Challenges Washington Node Update Next Steps Questions. Challenge Grant Update. Challenge Grant Lead

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Challenge Grant Update April 19, 2006 Douglas Sellers, NatureServe Janice Miller, WA DNR

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  1. Challenge Grant Update April 19, 2006 Douglas Sellers, NatureServe Janice Miller, WA DNR

  2. About the Grant Partners Status of Grant Activities Unique Challenges Washington Node Update Next Steps Questions Challenge Grant Update

  3. Challenge Grant Lead State of Delaware, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control Participating Agencies NatureServe State of Washington, Department of Natural Resources State of Washington, Department of Ecology State of New Mexico, Natural Heritage New Mexico State of Illinois, Department of Natural Resources Grant Partner Organizations

  4. NatureServe Key Activities • Establish scientific standards for biological inventory and biodiversity data management. • Develop comprehensive and current databases for at-risk species and ecological communities. • Design advanced biodiversity data management systems in partnership with information technology leaders. • Make biodiversity information accessible through the Internet, publications, and custom services to clients and partners. • Provide information products and conservation services to guide natural resource decision-making.

  5. The NatureServe Network in 2006 Puerto Rico TVA Navajo Nation • NatureServe: • 100 staff in 6 offices • Arlington, VA - Boston, MA • Boulder, CO - Ottawa, ON • Durham, NC • Minneapolis, MN Member Programs: 800 staff in - 54 U.S. programs - 8 Canadian programs - 15 Latin American/Caribbean programs

  6. Collect, analyze, and distribute detailed information about plants, animals, ecosystems. Conduct field inventories for rare and threatened species and ecological communities. Track the distribution and conservation status of each species / community and the precise location and status of each population. Conduct environmental reviews and assessments Directly protect and manage natural areas in some places Natural Heritage Programs and Conservation Data Centers . . . Chris Hobson, Virginia Div. of Natural Heritage Photo by Lynda Richardson

  7. Approximately 10 Staff Annual program budget: US $600,000 Responds to 2,500 information requests each year The “Typical” Natural Heritage Program New York NHP staff Québec CDC Staff Latin American program and CDC staff

  8. Status of Challenge Grant Activities

  9. Implement a new, voluntary biodiversity data flow: Provides EPA and Exchange Network users with access to locations of threatened and endangered species Supports conservation planning, environmental regulation and decision-making Creates opportunity for applications that can consume biodiversity data Document and share results: Promotes knowledge transfer to NatureServe network members Expands audience for Exchange Network to other conservation organizations with similar biodiversity data holdings Grant Objectives

  10. Year 1: Develop XML schema for biodiversity data flow Develop and implement data access requirements Develop and implement data transfer utilities Year 2: Develop and implement Web Service APIs Prototype user interfaces to the biodiversity data Pilot NatureServe Vista application interface Document and share results Project Timeline

  11. Gathered user stories for biodiversity data flow Identified web service methods Drafted XML schemas Challenge Grant Workshop

  12. State transportation department planner wants occurrences of rare plants and animals within or near a road building project. EPA Office of Wetlands, Oceans, & Watersheds needs generalized location data to find out which species are most at risk for impacts from water pollution. Researcher needs distribution and status for a given species for a specified area. Example Web Service User Stories:GetSpeciesOccurrence

  13. NOAA oil spill response team will have immediate access to the most up to date information on the presence of species in the vicinity of the spill to ensure those sites are prioritized for clean-up/protection and are not further damaged during emergency response/clean-up efforts. DOT office of pipeline safety operators will be able to select an area around a pipeline where a break or defect is found to determine if there are species of concern in that area. Example Web Service User Stories:IsPresent

  14. Species schema is at v 0.4 Species occurrence is at v 0.3 Public comments under review, working toward v 1.0 Addressing Exchange Network standards XML Schemas for Biodiversity Data

  15. State Programs are custodians for detailed occurrence data Data access policies vary from state to state Data sensitivity issues include: Protection of sensitive ecological resources Privacy protection for data providers and/or land owners State-specific “Data Sharing Agreements” define terms under which NatureServe can provide data to third parties Data Access Policies & Agreements

  16. Biodiversity query methods: NameSearch* GetSpecies* IsPresent GetSpeciesOccurrence *Beta version available now Production version June 06 Web Services • NatureServe, DE, WA nodes established • Exchange Network methods supported: • Authenticate, Query, GetServices

  17. Demonstration map viewer for species occurrence data Displays detailed occurrence data, with species image and link to NatureServe Explorer for full species report Prototype User Interfaces

  18. Use Exchange Network to demonstrate application interface between Biotics and NatureServe Vista decision support system via Web Services Pilot project in Delaware Natural Heritage Program to guide implementation of comprehensive state wildlife plan June 06 target date for completing the Vista pilot NatureServe Vista Pilot

  19. Not a typical data exchange flow Request/Response based Web Services Existing Web Services for data publishing Existing XML data standards under NatureServe namespace Challenge grant, with implementation goals Ambitious work plan, non-trivial technical challenges Deploying challenge grant products into production environment at 2 states Combines challenge grant with deployment grants Unique Challenges

  20. Spatial Data Provide Web Services to species location data Create map-based user interface to spatial data Model complex polygon shapes in XML schema Security Fine-grained authorization roles Spatial feature-level authorization Integration with NAAS Heterogeneous Network Different deployment environments Different physical data models – similar logical data models Unique Challenges, cont.

  21. Washington Node Update

  22. Second Exchange Node for Washington: Why? How? Washington Natural HeritageProgram Node

  23. Steps to implementation: Work Plan Equipment Plan Contractor Selection & Requirements Washington Natural HeritageProgram Node

  24. Agency Structure Considerations: WA NHP Connection with WA DNR DNR ITD Coordination required Equipment Support Application Support Washington Natural HeritageProgram Node

  25. Infrastructure Setup: Equipment Purchase & Installation Windsor Node Application Installation Washington Natural HeritageProgram Node

  26. Current System Status: Where we are now Where we go next Washington Natural HeritageProgram Node

  27. Knowledge transfer to 50+ state programs Free distribution of grant software products Publish technical and process documentation Present informational sessions at regional conferences Improve grant guidance and visibility for non-traditional data flows Connect NatureServe member programs with traditional state node agencies on future grant proposals Add Washington next steps? Next Steps for Biodiversity Nodes

  28. Questions? http://services.natureserve.org/

  29. Questions? http://services.natureserve.org/

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