Project
funded by the Terrestrial and Freshwater Biodiversity Information System
Program
The Terrestrial and Freshwater Biodiversity Information
System (TFBIS) Programme supports the conservation of New Zealand's
indigenous biodiversity, by increasing awareness of and access to
fundamental data and information about terrestrial and freshwater biota and
biodiversity. The Programme is one of a number of new programmes that
reflects Government's commitment to achieving the goals of the New Zealand
Biodiversity Strategy (NZBS). More information on TFBIS may be found here.
After the formation of FUNNZ in 2005 council members of FUNNZ submitted an
application to the TFBIS fund to support improvements to the collection of
information generated during forays and to collate and digitise data from
past forays.
The project is now (January 2007) partly complete. A new
information system was used to collate data on the
20th Fungal Foray in Westport. The resulting
report for the Wesport foray is now available.
A presentation on
the project was made at the Wesport foray and is available here.
You will need Microsoft Powerpoint to view this presentation.
Description
of the TFBIS funded project
The
following text is extracted from the project proposal prepared in 2005
Issue
Since 1986, 19 national
fungal forays have been organised on an annual basis, each of 3-6 days
duration and held in a different region of
New Zealand
. Forays are attended by 30-50 participants including many
New Zealand
and overseas mycological experts, both professional and non-professional,
who provide their time free of charge. These events generate a large amount
of valuable information. This proposal seeks to improve information
management and maximise the output and availability of fungal biodiversity
data generated from this pool of expertise at each of the past, and all
future, fungal forays. Such a proposal is only now feasible because of
the formation in 2005 of a
New Zealand
mycological society, the Fungal Network of New Zealand (FUNNZ), and the
forthcoming availability of a nationally available data management and
dissemination web portal, the NZ Biodiversity Recording Network (
NZBRN).
The new society provides a formal structure for the organisation and
coordination of effort and outputs associated with the forays, as well as
hosting a website through which fungal information is widely disseminated
and made available to NZBRN.
Outputs
-
From the past 19
forays, prepared species lists (where they exist, e.g. as supplied in
compliance with DOC permits) will be collated and loaded onto the new NZ
Biodiversity Recording Network (NZBRN) Gateway (TFBIS Project 152).
Available images will also be loaded into NZBRN and/or NZFUNGI and
linked between the two databases.
For the 20th NZ Fungal
Foray, May 2006,
Westport
:
-
Develop a data
management protocol covering the capture and tracking of standard
metadata and data associated with fungal collections, observations and
photographic images.
-
Prepare a
presentation on the end-user engagement in biodiversity information
collection, the application of the protocol, and the dissemination of
results through the NZBRN. The presentation is needed in order to
engage end-users in an activity that will require them to adopt standard
and more time-consuming methods. The foray includes a one day Research
Colloquium attracting more professional participants and students. A
broader presentation will be made to attendees of the colloquium.
-
During and after
the foray, geo-referenced data on collections and observations will be
digitized into a standard format following the standards adopted at
Landcare Research and in conformance with GBIF/TDWG standards.
-
Digitized data will
be processed and made available to the NZBRN, along with accompanying
images.
-
Uncertain
identifications and critical taxa will be flagged and checked by
qualified taxonomists.
-
Collections will be
processed for accession into the New Zealand Fungal Herbarium (PDD) at
Landcare Research, or other internationally recognised NZ herbaria where
appropriate.
Effectiveness
Fungal biodiversity data is lacking for most of the conservation estate,
apart from specimen based records in registered collections.
Considerable additional knowledge is gained, however, when foray
participants commit up to 6 days a year to survey forests of a particular
region. This application will encourage better information management and
leverage the high quality data generated freely by these national and
international experts. Data will be relevant to DOC Conservancy managers by
provision of additional new knowledge of a large but often overlooked
component of biodiversity critical to forest ecosystems, and as distribution
records of fungi enabling better definition of threat status.
Biosecurity managers will gain improved documentation of presence of fungal
pathogens and of distribution of invasive exotic weed fungi. A similar
initiative in the
UK
by the British Mycological Society in the 1990s resulted in a national
database that now contains 1.2 million records. Information from this
resource continues to be essential in establishing the UK Biodiversity
Action Plans for conserving 28 fungi and important fungal habitats (http://www.ukbap.org.uk/default.aspx).
Methods
From previous forays,
records of data and images will be sourced from reports to DOC, from
personal archives of participants, and from herbarium and culture collection
databases. Implementation of the digital recording of fungal records,
including presence/absence data, will begin from the April 2006 foray, and
data uploaded into NZBRN. A laptop will be used for this purpose on the
foray, and between forays the laptop will be used by indviduals to enter
data from personnel historical records.
Milestones
- Collate and format data from past forays by 30 June 2006.
- Develop a data/metadata management protocol based on standards by 30
April 2006
- Prepare presentation on data management/dissemination/use for foray
participants and Research Colloquium attendees by 31 May 2006
- Collate and digitize geo-referenced data on collections, observations
and images by 30 June 2006
- Process digitized data for the NZBRN and NZFUNGI websites and the PDD
Fungal Herbarium by 30 Sept. 2006
- Verify identifications of critical taxa by 31 March 2007
- Process physical collections for accession into the national fungal
collection (PDD) at Landcare Research by 31 March 2007