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Collecting Fishes for Science An African View. Ethics Common sense – health and safety Collections and ‘Bioprospecting’ Biodiversity Informatics – “knowledge.

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Presentation on theme: "Collecting Fishes for Science An African View. Ethics Common sense – health and safety Collections and ‘Bioprospecting’ Biodiversity Informatics – “knowledge."— Presentation transcript:

1 Collecting Fishes for Science An African View

2 Ethics Common sense – health and safety Collections and ‘Bioprospecting’ Biodiversity Informatics – “knowledge repatriation” Checklist

3 Ethics  Have you packed your “code of conduct”?  All life is precious  (In Africa) Fishes are a valuable renewable natural resource – “food”  Respect African culture – it is different, and usually more apt for the circumstance!

4 Fish and Fishing are an integral part of African culture

5 Common sense Natural waters in Africa are dangerous  diseases – the germs & bugs are nasty!  crocodiles are sneaky  hippos bite  anti-personnel mines hurt  dangerous trash is everywhere  spines, razor edged plants, etc

6 Work with local partners Permits generally are necessary Local officials are control freaks – prepare well in advance Local permission (courtesy) is essential – respect local customs and protocols Plan to share equitably Ensure knowledge repatriation Ensure long-term repository – museums focus change with time (universities are not long-term repositories) Collections

7 Bioprospecting  Be Careful of this tag – developing nations are alert and reacting  Check the legal requirements  have clear (written) understanding with partners  Permits to cover “tissues” – be open  ALWAYS voucher properly  ALWAYS lodge vouchers in open access collections

8 Biodiversity Informatics Africa is biodiversity ‘rich’ but ‘knowledge poor/deprived’ Africa’s scientific biodiversity resources are scattered in external institutions How do we ensure these resources are (i) available to African researchers/science, and (ii) address historical disadvantages? Modern information technologies and information systems hold the key! I believe fair partnerships and effort from all parties is necessary

9 B iodiversity informatics is to: collect, capture, store, analyse, synthesise, report, use and share Biodiversity information so as to exploit the natural relationships in the information.

10 Two Data Streams Specimens Species CollectionsResearch

11 Specimen Stream Museum specimens biodiversity database linked to GIS (e.g. Specify) Synthesis (e.g. Ecological Niche Modelling) Application (e.g. conservation planning) GBIF Global Change

12 African Nodes of GBIF Advances in African Biodiversity Informatics

13 Created by MRAC African Zoology Department To facilitate access to collections (in line with Belgium signatory to CBD Promote organise and disseminate information on African biodiversity Facilitate access to biodiversity data banks Disseminate information on the collections through internet and “an interface” (portal) Help African countries in the inventory and sustainable management of their biodiversity, in particular by sponsoring study visits of African scientists MRAC African Biodiversity Information Centre

14 All Catfish Species Inventory Species Stream

15 Tree of Life web project Species Stream

16 Faunafri Species Stream

17 Photo: Ernst Swartz Species Stream Encyclopedia of Life

18 Online Literature

19 The IUCN Pan African Freshwater Biodiversity Assessment Molluscs Crabs Odonata Aquatic Plants East Africa Madagascar West Africa Central Africa North Africa North East Africa Freshwater Fishes Southern Africa

20 Barcode of Life

21 New African RWG partners Existing African RWG African FISH-BOL Participating Countries FISH-BOL in Africa SA iBOL 2008 25 Regional Working Group members from 16 countries 679 of 8720 species already barcoded (8%) Support from CBOL, CCDB (& their sponsors), IUCN, SARCF (NRF), WIO project & CoML

22 So, lets get going!

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