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The Biota-FAPESP Biodiversity Database and Information System – SinBIOTA Tiago E. M. Duque Estrada Executive Manager Virtual Institute for Biodiversity – BIOTA-FAPESP Program

The Biota-FAPESP Biodiversity Database and Information System – SinBIOTA - Tiago Egger

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The Biota-FAPESP Biodiversity Database and Information

System – SinBIOTATiago E. M. Duque Estrada

Executive Manager

Virtual Institute for Biodiversity – BIOTA-FAPESP Program

Content of this presentation

• History – Why the existence of such system

• Structure – What the system has/does

• Usage – Who and how it has been used

• Future – Coping with changes and new technologies

History

• Biota-FAPESP Program was officially created in 1999 as a response to 3 years effort from a group of scientists that work with biodiversity related issues together with FAPESP’s Biological Sciences and Scientific Directory. This as an answer to the implementation of CBD in the country.

• In the following year the SinBIOTA was commissioned and developed by CRIA (http://www.cria.org.br).

• 2001 was released the Biota Neotropica Scientific Journal

History

Data in it: Year Added Occurrences Specimens

2000 505 10580

2001 770 7279

2002 2526 20826

2003 2464 10565

2004 1208 12066

2005 1571 15778

2006 5424 25305

2007 441 3198

2008 1634 5247

2009 323 4814

2010 12 135

2011 4 1751

2012 1 0

2013 89 1924

2014 567 2712

2015 245 1788

Structure

Structure

• 7* Step Form in which the user must fill the occurrence record

• Four types of user: Visitor, Admin, Coordinators and Member

• Taxonomy from The Catalogue of Life (http://www.catalogueoflife.org)

Queries Project User Occurrence

Creation/Removal Edition Creation Removal Creation Edition

Visitor Yes No No No No No No

Admin Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

Coordinator Yes No Yes Yes No* Yes Yes

Member Yes No No No No Yes Yes

Structure

1

2

7

3

4

6

Structure

Structure

• Explicit Data Policies and Metadata standards (TDWG, KNB, etc.)

• Integration with international initiatives (GBIF, OBIS, ALA, EOL, etc.)

• Scalability and security of large databases

• Multimedia data and multimodal search

• Seamless Biodiversity and Map visualization

• Interoperability with analysis tools (sp. distribution, etc.)

• Datasets and monitoring network management

Usage

It stores (End of April, 2015):

Projects 139

Users 375

Occurrence Authors 1180

Taxonomic Groups 180

Occurrences 17784

Collected Specimens 124018

Usage

• 2006 – Continental Priority Areas for Conservation and Restauration Workshop – SMA and Biota Researchers

• Intense activity in the system

• Several maps produced and an important publication used for public policies in conservation in São Paulo State

Future

• Use of mobile clients

• Workflow sharing

• Social software features (tagging, annotation, etc.)

Thank you!

Tiago Egger Moellwald Duque Estrada

[email protected]