Elsevier

Ecological Informatics

Volume 49, January 2019, Pages 22-31
Ecological Informatics

The Bari Manifesto: An interoperability framework for essential biodiversity variables

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoinf.2018.11.003Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Data products for Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBV) positively improve human ability to address biodiversity challenges

  • Primary observation data must be processed in a global, trans-national information technology framework

  • Many technical, social and legal factors influence data interoperability and interoperability across infrastructures

  • The 'Bari Manifesto' offers ten interoperability principles guiding production and management of EBV data products

  • Standards bodies, infrastructures, researchers and funders can take practical steps to improve support for EBV data products

Abstract

Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBV) are fundamental variables that can be used for assessing biodiversity change over time, for determining adherence to biodiversity policy, for monitoring progress towards sustainable development goals, and for tracking biodiversity responses to disturbances and management interventions. Data from observations or models that provide measured or estimated EBV values, which we refer to as EBV data products, can help to capture the above processes and trends and can serve as a coherent framework for documenting trends in biodiversity. Using primary biodiversity records and other raw data as sources to produce EBV data products depends on cooperation and interoperability among multiple stakeholders, including those collecting and mobilising data for EBVs and those producing, publishing and preserving EBV data products. Here, we encapsulate ten principles for the current best practice in EBV-focused biodiversity informatics as ‘The Bari Manifesto’, serving as implementation guidelines for data and research infrastructure providers to support the emerging EBV operational framework based on trans-national and cross-infrastructure scientific workflows. The principles provide guidance on how to contribute towards the production of EBV data products that are globally oriented, while remaining appropriate to the producer's own mission, vision and goals. These ten principles cover: data management planning; data structure; metadata; services; data quality; workflows; provenance; ontologies/vocabularies; data preservation; and accessibility. For each principle, desired outcomes and goals have been formulated. Some specific actions related to fulfilling the Bari Manifesto principles are highlighted in the context of each of four groups of organizations contributing to enabling data interoperability - data standards bodies, research data infrastructures, the pertinent research communities, and funders. The Bari Manifesto provides a roadmap enabling support for routine generation of EBV data products, and increases the likelihood of success for a global EBV framework.

Keywords

Essential biodiversity variables
Cyberinfrastructure
E-infrastructure
Data products
Informatics
Interoperability

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