The U.S. Geological Survey is the Coordinating
Institution (CI) for the Invasive Species Thematic Network. The USGS
will not however receive GEF funds, but rather will help coordinate the
development of this TN.
Rationale for Selection of the CI
The IABIN Invasive Species
Information Network (I3N) was initiated by USGS/BIO in 2001 fourteen
countries, covering most of the terrestrial area of the hemisphere, are
in various stages of implementing I3N; three new participants signed up
in August 2003. I3N has been recognized by CBD and GISP as an
initiative to be supported. The IABIN council reaffirmed the key role
of I3N at its third meeting. I3N consists of web-accessible, national
catalogs of invasive species metadata. Tools at the disposal of the
network include a cataloging and data output tool; a listserv; a
virtual community; and an extensive bilingual web site that contains a
repository for data submitted by those participants not able to serve
their own, a Cataloguer download page with instructions, a search and
browse page, instructions on creating XML and on serving data on the
internet, fact sheets, contact information, sample XML output, and all
pilot project documents.
For this reason it is proposed that
I3N be recognized as the IABIN invasive species thematic network.
USGS/BIO and its partners in NBII have made major investments to
increase the amount of publicly available biological information on
invasive species and international initiatives. The NBII invasive
species initiative funds I3N-related activities by developing the
Invasive Species Information Node, encouraging NBII nodes to adopt data
standards, participating in GISP activities, coordinating workshops,
furthering agreements on protocols and standards, and providing
technical assistance to NBII partners. The invasive species program of
the USGS Biology discipline contributes to invasive species databases
targeted for research and monitoring.
Description
The Invasive Species Thematic
Network will encourage the creation and standardization of national and
sub-national databases, promote their interoperability, and create
value-added products.
Key Justification Facts:
Invasive species pose increasing risks to human health, native species, ecosystems, and national economies.
The exchange of information across national borders is key to the detection and management of this threat.
Interoperable national and sub national databases provide the basis for information exchange.
The Invasive Species Thematic Network provides direct access to databases currently scattered and inaccessible.
General Objective
Expand the IABIN Invasive Species
Information Network to all IABIN member countries. Increase the
usability, content, and value of the network.