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Viewing 15 posts - 61 through 75 (of 151 total)
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  • in reply to: Session 3 #7354

    Yan Liu commented
    Thank you for your comments and clarification. I was a taxonomist at the beginning of my professional life. There is no doubt that taxonomy expertise is very important in biodiversity investigation and monitoring. Perhaps the slice does not express my points in appropriate way, actually, just because of the importance of taxonomists, and I believe that environmental DNA technology can free taxonomists from extensive investigation and sampling and play a vital role in the critical stages of classification identification.

    in reply to: Session 3 #7353

    Karen Siu-Ting commented
    A comment to Dr Yan Liu’s presentation. I disagree with your statement that with undertaking eDNA monitoring you avoid the need for taxonomists. All the opposite! now with the need to increment the information in databases to help identify eDNA sampling, taxonomists studies are more more needed than ever to help in this effort. Investment in taxonomy and biodiversity research is very urgently needed to help clarify and delimit the species to enable eDNA studies.

    in reply to: Session 3 #7352

    Yan Liu responded
    Thank you for your question. As far as I know, many departments and local governments in China attach great importance to the conservation and inheritance of traditional knowledge related to biodiversity, carrying out a series of surveys and cataloguing work and developing encouraging conservation measures. I believe those measures and actions are on the track to protect biodiversity.

    in reply to: Session 3 #7351

    Madhav Karki questioned
    My question to Yan Liu: thanks for your clear presentation. my question is: Apart from technologies and innovations, how China is using indigenous and local knowledge in planning post 2020 biodiversity framework my take is techlogical fix alone will not halt biodiversity loss and restore the degraded habitats?

    in reply to: Session 3 #7342

    Johny S. Tasirin commented
    From the summary of session two, I think we should pay more attention to fast-growing tree species to provide sustainable sources for energy generation.

    in reply to: Session 3 – Breakout group 2 #7339

    Smily SMILY questioned
    Any standards to check sustainable forest management?

    in reply to: Session 3 – Breakout group 2 #7338

    Alexandros Gasparatos responded
    Thanks for the comment Ms Spencer. I completely agree with your point. This reflects very well the point I tried to made about the need for context-specific understanding of the possible impacts and solutions.

    in reply to: Session 3 – Breakout group 2 #7337

    Ruth Spencer commented
    Thanks Mr Gasparatos and Good morning-Ruth Spencer from Antigua and Barbuda-a small Caribbean SIDS , We have the high and hot temperatures perfect for the transition but it is not a just transition since regulatory processes are not transparent and approval conditions for RE systems getting more and more difficult . In additon each year we are faced with hurricanes and storms which are increasing in frequencies and intensities so RE systems must be designed as flexible systems that can be put up and down in a short time interval.

    in reply to: Session 2 #7331

    jannysumilla questioned
    Can individual researcher publish directly to GBIF Data found out to be deficient from a certain Distribution without the links to Institutional affiliations?

    in reply to: Session 1 #7330

    bashiryusufabubakar questioned
    I’m still with the opinion that the best approach to save and enrich our biodiversity is a complete change to our farming system in sub saharan Africa. Agroforestry ensures you enrich the farms with more multipurpose trees with direct implications on biodiversity enrichment. But, why not the FAO put a policy and implementation on our farming system?

    in reply to: Session 2 #7279

    Natasha Ali commented
    You can see the analysis in this CBD INF doc here: https://www.cbd.int/doc/c/a6d3/3108/88518eab9c9d12b1c418398d/sbstta-24-inf-16-en.pdf

    in reply to: Session 2 #7278

    Raki Ap responded
    Thanks for answer Mike!

    Indigenous Perspectives is essential, because if cared about their lives and rights, we did not had a climate and biodiversity crisis.

    So I hope we all realize this thr way ahead in all the things we do.

    God Bless You All.

    in reply to: Session 2 #7277

    Alina Lupu questioned
    Just to complement what Henrique said : The European Commission will soon launch the implementation of the Digital Twin of the Earth ( https://ec.europa.eu/digital-single-market/en/destination-earth-destine) and a call for experts will be published, for modelling and the design and implementation of large scale, data and compute intensive federated systems, in particular federated architecture design, HPC and cloud infrastructures operations and management, AI, data governance and stewardship.
    The expert group will help also the preparation of the Biodiversity Digital Twin that will be officially launched in 2024 (but start being prepared now).

    in reply to: Session 2 #7276

    Anna Hewson questioned
    How do other countries fund their ‘open data sets’ for protecting bng sites? Is there an uplifted government budget for open data and handling of data, anf standards, to ensure accuracy of one national database? Having these conversations now in the UK.

    *open data sets for protected BNG sites (to avoid future development on them)

    in reply to: Session 2 #7275

    Mike Gill responded
    Here’s two that sort of cover this but there are many more. Some grey literature publications from WCMC on the BIP website that might be useful.
    Han, X., Gill, M., Hamilton, H., Vergara, S., and Young, B. (2020). Progress on national biodiversity indicator reporting and prospects for filling indicator gaps in Southeast Asia. Environmental and Sustainability Indicators
    Bhatt. R., Gill, M., Hamilton, H., Han, X., Linden, H., and Young, B. (2020). Uneven Use of Biodiversity Indicators in Fifth National Reports to the Convention on Biological Diversity. Environmental Conservation

Viewing 15 posts - 61 through 75 (of 151 total)