GBiOS: A global observatory to monitor Earth’s biodiversity.

Vizzuality
Vizzuality Blog
Published in
2 min readAug 29, 2023

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A game-changer in biodiversity conservation. GEO BON scientists developed this innovative system combining tech, data, and global collaboration to track biodiversity changes and guide targeted conservation.

At a time of nature crisis driven by unparalleled rates of biodiversity loss, a new interconnected system to monitor biodiversity around the world is urgently needed to direct and focus conservation action.

“The lethal combination of habitat loss, the exploitation of natural populations, pollution, and climate change is causing species extinction rates not seen since the last mass extinction 65 million years ago,” said Prof. Andrew Gonzalez, Liber Ero Chair in Conservation Biology at McGill University, and co-Chair of GEO BON. “We lack the means to monitor these impacts fast enough across most areas of the planet.”

Operating much like the existing global network of weather stations that monitor climate change and its impacts, the Global Biodiversity Observing System (GBiOS), is a proposal developed by scientists from the Group on Earth Observations Biodiversity Observation Network (GEO BON), and its partners, that will combine technology, data, and knowledge from around the world to foster collaboration and data sharing among countries and to provide the data urgently needed to monitor biodiversity change and target action.

GBiOS can galvanize collaboration on the critical issue of biodiversity data access, sharing, and equitable use. “It can provide the information we need at the pace we need it to support countries as they make progress towards their biodiversity goals”, said Prof. Alice Hughes, Associate Professor at The University of Hong Kong, and one of the dozens of scientists who collaborated to develop the proposal for GBiOS.

GBiOS is a missing piece of the science-policy puzzle needed to support the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework agreed upon at the COP-15 conference in Montreal last year, contributing to a representative and inclusive understanding of biodiversity change and supporting effective implementation of policies that are designed to reverse biodiversity loss and achieve the global goals for nature in the coming decades.

The article A global biodiversity observing system to unite monitoring and guide action
Gonzalez, A. et al., will appear in
Nature Ecology and Evolution.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-023-02171-0

This press release was originally written by Prof. Andrew Gonzalez and published on GEO BON.

Contact information:
Prof. Andrew Gonzalez
Professor | Liber Ero Chair in Biodiversity Conservation | co-Chair GEO BON
andrew.gonzalez@mcgill.ca

Veronica Wrobel
Communication Officer GEO BON
veronica.wrobel@mcgill.ca

We are proud of the work of Vizzuality's colleague, Mike Harfoot, to co-author this article. We need to take action now. That is why we are also calling for better use of the data we already have, not only when this system is established!

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Vizzuality
Vizzuality Blog

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