ࡱ> LNK x-bjbj %@ccx%4 60D BDDDDDDM "zDPPTDYXRBPB:H,m8t 6 o0~Ri#i#JPPP k:   TON Report OBIS-SEAMAP OBIS-SEAMAP OBIS-SEAMAP is the global node for marine mammals, seabird and seaturtle data. OBIS-SEAMAP was initiated in 2001 under the NOPP program and was initially funded by the A.P. Sloan Foundation. OBIS-SEAMAP is currently funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation (2007 2010). A recent description of the OBIS-SEAMAP node can be found in Halpin et al. 2009. The OBIS-SEAMAP project conducted and published a gap-analysis of the data holdings in 2010 (Kot et al. 2010). This gap-analysis assesses the current data holdings and will help guide the development of future data acquisition priorities. Data holdings and growth in last year number of records 2,399,827 (total) 184,334 (2010) number of distinct points 2,399,827 number of distinct species 324 (All) number of distinct data providers 291 (All) 52 (2010) Usage statistics web site different from iobis.org web site number of hits 38,838 (Since February 2010) number of pages downloaded N/A number of visits 15,878 (Since February 2010) publications based on RON data mentioning RON Halpin, P.N.; A.J. Read, B.D. Best, E. Fujioka, B. Donnelly, C. Kot, L.J. Hazen, D. Hyrenbach and L. Crowder. (2009) OBIS-SEAMAP2.0: Developing a research data commons for the ecological studies of marine mammals, seabirds and seaturtles. Oceanography 22(2)104-115. Best, B.D.; P.N. Halpin; E, Fujioka, A.J. Read, S.S. Qian, L.J. Hazen and R.S. Schick. (2007) Geospatial Web Services within a Scientific Workflow: Forecasting Marine Mammal Habitat in a Dynamic Environment. Ecological Informatics 2:210 223 Halpin P.N., Read A.J., Best B.D., Hyrenbach K.D., Fujioka E., Coyne M.S., Crowder L.B., Freeman S.A., Spoerri C. (2006). OBIS-SEAMAP: developing a biogeographic research data commons for the ecological studies of marine mammals, seabirds, and sea turtles. Marine Ecological Progess Series. 316:239-246 Kot, C. A. Boustany and P.N. Halpin. (2010) Temporal patterns of sea turtle bycatch in the U.S. Atlantic pelagic fishery. Can. J. Fisheries and Aquatic Science 67(1): 42-57. doi:10.1139/F09-160. presentations in national, regional and international meetings Halpin, P.N. 2010. Incorporating ocean biodiversity data into Marine Spatial Planning: the role of the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS) & OBIS-SEAMAP. World Ocean Summit, Belfast, N. Ireland. Halpin, P.N. & E. Vanden Berghe. 2010. Uses of OBIS data to inform the CBD Programmes of Work. Coastal & Marine Data side-event, Convention on Biodiversity COP10, Nagoya, Japan. Funding situation/sustainability core funding and source (monetary; in kind; FTE) National Oceanographic Partnership Program (NOPP) / National Science Foundation (NSF) proposals submitted and those approved; for each of the proposals abstract (See attached) funding organisation(s) National Oceanographic Partnership Program (NOPP) / National Science Foundation resources requested/received Recent Funding Received: 2007 $488,039 NOPP/NSF Received: 2008 $493,322 NOPP/NSF Received: 2009 $213,360 NOPP/NSF Supplement 2009 prospect of financing participation in RON meetings participate in proposal development to maintain the OBIS network (can we. as a network, develop proposals that stand a better chance of being funded than as separate RONs?) Problems encountered/issues operating the Node: financial Financing the R&D work that the OBIS-SEAMAP team would like to lead of for the international OBIS network. technical Data duplication issues when data from thematic nodes are uploaded to regional nodes and to OBIS and vice versa. Introduction of DOI. political (are people willing to publish data through OBIS? Do the authorities stimulate uptake of OBIS and similar systems by requiring results of publicly-funded research be made public?) How to appropriately provide credit/citations when multiple organizations contributed to the data; issues of principal investigators and financially responsible agencies. Also need to establish a mechanism that transfers the data credit information from node to node so that it does not get lost during the transfer. OBIS-SEAMAP still requires the user to contact or get permission from data providers for use of the data for any publication/product. OBIS does not. So there is some discrepancy between OBIS-SEAMAP and iOBIS. Technical Back-up and archiving procedures Full database backup every 10 days Quality control/assessment Take-up of WoRMS, IRMNG and CoL Taxonomy is based on ITIS. Species names are reviewed by data providers. Need for Gazetteer Advanced mapping, visualization and search functionality available on the website Description of the general quality control procedures Reformat the original data to the OBIS-SEAMAP schema. Visual examination of locations. Thorough review by data providers before going public. Collaboration with National Oceanographic Data Centre Abstract: Current NOPP/NSF funding proposal 2007 2010 (extended through June 2011) Project Summary Our ability to mitigate adverse interactions with marine mammals and other protected marine species is dependent on direct access to high-quality data sets, ecological models and expert knowledge. The OBIS-SEAMAP program ( HYPERLINK "http://seamap.env.duke.edu/" http://seamap.env.duke.edu) is designed specifically to make such information available to the research, education and management communities. Over the past four years OBIS-SEAMAP has successfully developed a multi-function information system to provide critical data to scientists, managers and educators under the NOPP program. Our ongoing efforts directly support the goals of the Census of Marine Life (CoML), the OBIS network and the operational missions of multiple agencies and educational user communities. For example, data products developed by OBIS-SEAMAP form the fundamental data stream required for the development of marine mammal habitat models for use by the U.S. Navy and are essential for the further development of this and other advanced decision support systems. We are requesting an essential renewal of funding for OBIS-SEAMAP to continue our information system services and to expand both the scope and depth of our program to better meet the increasingly complex demands facing the ocean science and management communities. We plan to focus new efforts on developing a more technically advanced and fully interoperable marine animal information management system within the context of the emerging integrated ocean observing system. The OBIS-SEAMAP system will continue to be a leading prototype for the development of new technologies and data delivery systems for CoML and the International Ocean Observing System (IOOS). Key highlights proposed for OBIS-SEAMAP in the renewal phase 2007-2010: Data gap analysis and prioritized expansion of the protected marine species geodatabase; Inclusion of new data types (acoustics, photo-ID, 4D telemetry and model outputs); Expanded technical functionality for internet mapping, species profiles, and modeling; Seamless interoperability with IOOS/GEOSS ocean observing community; and Development of new partnerships focusing on new data acquisition and interoperability. Our proposal is being submitted under the generic ONR-BAA 4.B renewals topic. However, the proposed work addresses multiple cross-cutting research needs identified in the announcement. Topic 4B.1 Investigations of Marine Mammals in Their Ecosystems will be addressed through the expansion of ecological models and environmental data into the OBIS-SEAMAP information system. Topic 4B.3 Improved Methods to Survey, Locate and Identify Marine Mammals will be addressed through the development of a targeted marine mammal data gap analysis, improved model evaluation methods (ROC), and further assessment of species guild aggregations. And Topic 4B.4 Algorithms, Databases and Models will be addressed through the standardization and integration of advanced animal diving and movement data from telemetry and other sources. In addition to fulfilling these important priorities, this renewal fulfills three over-arching NOPP priorities: (1) we will continue to serve as a fundamental node for technical innovation for marine animal information systems in the CoML / OBIS network; (2) we plan to aggressively use the OBIS-SEAMAP information system as a working prototype biological information node within the emerging integrated ocean observing system (Topic 1 IOOS) community. And finally, OBIS-SEAMAP will continue to play an award winning role in education and outreach across a wide spectrum of users spanning K-12, higher education as well as our directly targeted ocean research and management community (Topic 2 Education and Outreach). Thanks to initial support from NOPP, ONR, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and the U.S. Navy, the OBIS-SEAMAP information system now stands on a firmly proven track-record of innovative technical development and successful delivery of critical data products and analytical tools. Our current success is a reflection of our determined focus to deliver high-quality data products that are required by our user community. This renewal proposal is necessary to continue essential data services for critical marine mammal management problems in the immediate future. 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