I thought this might be of interest to the masses

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Julie Palakovich Carr <jpalakovichc...@aibs.org>
Date: Mon, Mar 4, 2013 at 12:55 PM
Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Scientists Call for Greater Access to Biodiversity
Resources, Data
To: ECOLOG-L@listserv.umd.edu


Creation of a Network Integrated Biocollections Alliance will increase
research productivity, solve societal problems, and drive innovation



The American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS) has released a
report from a workshop of experts that was convened last fall to
outline the steps needed to build a Network Integrated Biocollections
Alliance (NIBA) in the next ten years. NIBA is a national scientific,
engineering, and data management initiative first called for in 2010.
When built, NIBA will provide online access to digitized data for
biological specimens held in natural history museums, university
science departments, and government laboratories, among other
repositories.

The experts’ workshop was convened by AIBS with support from the
National Science Foundation.

NIBA is a coordinated, large-scale and sustained effort to digitize
the nation’s biological collections in order to make their data and
images available through the Internet. The Implementation Plan for a
Network Integrated Biocollections Alliance (
http://www.aibs.org/public-policy/biocollections.html ) “provides a
detailed roadmap to achieve a vital national goal, which will be
extremely important in coping with consequences of climate change,
invasive species, pollution and other major environmental problems,”
said Dr. James Hanken, director of Harvard University’s Museum of
Comparative Zoology and an author of the report.

In 2010, the scientific community developed a Strategic Plan for NIBA.
The Strategic Plan has been well received, but the scientific
community also recognized a need to augment the Strategic Plan by
identifying the key steps, milestones, and stakeholders required to
fully achieve its goals. Thus, AIBS convened a workshop to develop an
Implementation Plan for NIBA. Both documents have emerged from the
biocollections community and have been widely informed through
workshops of experts. The broader scientific community and the public
have also provided input that informed the final Implementation Plan .

“Scientists are eager to see the NIBA implemented,” said Dr. Lucinda
McDade, Interim Executive Director of Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden
and an author of the report. Hanken concurs and notes that NIBA is
required to help move research forward and to ensure that policymakers
and the public have access to the information they need to make
informed decisions.

“This report strongly emphasizes research applications while also
highlighting important educational components and focusing on
workforce training that will be necessary to achieve and sustain
NIBA,” said McDade.

The National Science Foundation already is showing earnest commitment
to achieving many of the goals identified in the report through
several current funding initiatives, notes Hanken. “Full
implementation of NIBA will require additional investments by other
federal and state agencies that hold major biocollections.”

The report identifies many specific activities that can and should be
led by individual scientific societies, biocollections institutions,
federal and state agencies, colleges and universities, and other
consumers of digitized data.

The Implementation Plan includes detailed recommendations to:

1) Establish an organizational and governance structure that will
provide the national leadership and decision-making mechanism required
to implement NIBA and to fully realize its Strategic Plan.
2) Advance engineering of the US biocollections cyberinfrastructure.
3) Enhance the training of existing collections staff and to create
the next generation of biodiversity information managers.
4) Increase support for and participation in NIBA by the research
community and a broad spectrum of stakeholders.
5) Establish an enduring and sustainable knowledge base.
6) Infuse specimen-based learning and exploration into formal and
informal education.

“We urge all stakeholders to join the NIBA effort,” said McDade.


The Strategic Plan for NIBA is at http://digbiocol.wordpress.com/brochure/

The Implementation Plan for NIBA is at
http://www.aibs.org/public-policy/biocollections.html





Julie Palakovich Carr
Senior Public Policy Associate
American Institute of Biological Sciences
1444 I Street, NW Suite 200
Washington, DC 20005
202-568-8117
www.aibs.org

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