[Taxacom] Who uses biodiversity data and why?
Bob Mesibov
mesibov at southcom.com.au
Thu Nov 23 19:41:54 CST 2006
David,
I'm familiar with Chapman's excellent GBIF report. It doesn't answer my
question. What it gives is a vast number of examples of how species locality
data are used for a whole range of purposes. The uses are overwhelmingly
local and regional, and only a minority relate to what might be Tom Ball's
"much better policy and resource-management choices locally, regionally and
globally".
I appreciate that there is an unstated question in what I'm asking, which I
might now state as "Why doesn't having more and better information
inevitably lead to more and better decisions?". Cynics on this list can now
chorus, "Politics!".
However, politics is not what I'm questioning here. I agree with you that
there should be no distinction between how we acquire, store, analyse and
report species locality data at local and global scales. That's just spatial
data management.
Where I might be disagreeing with you is in how species locality data are
used for conservation, land use and resource management planning. Here there
are substantial differences between approaches at local, regional and global
scales. More to the point, the overwhelming majority of planning decisions
are made at local scales using local data, and they are made (with any luck)
with the help of biodiversity specialists familiar with the local situation.
I don't need convincing that having ready access to species locality data
makes the job of those specialists and local-scale decision-makers easier. I
need convincing that
(a) primary species locality data is used to make "much better policy and
resource-management choices" globally, and
(b) universal access to all biodiversity data will assist decision-making at
the local level, where the overwhelming majority of biodiversity-related
issues are considered.
Strong evidence for (a) and (b) would help justify the push for universal
access to all biodiversity data. I haven't seen that evidence.
---
Dr Robert Mesibov
Honorary Research Associate, Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery
and School of Zoology, University of Tasmania
Home contact: PO Box 101, Penguin, Tasmania, Australia 7316
(03) 64371195; 61 3 64371195
Tasmanian Multipedes
http://www.qvmag.tas.gov.au/zoology/multipedes/mulintro.html
Spatial data basics for Tasmania
http://www.utas.edu.au/spatial/locations/index.html
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