Addressing Oceania’s freshwater biodiversity data deficiency by mobilizing Melanesian datasets

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Kobibi lake, Solomon Islands
Kobibi lake, Solomon Islands. Photo via Flickr by WorldFish (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Freshwater biodiversity data is under reported for the Oceanic islands due to lack of trained resident specialists, misreported dataset and or unpublished dataset mostly limited to grey literature. This can be improved by training freshwater project related representatives from targeted Oceania countries for collation and updating of the existing data on GBIF database.

The proposed project aims to directly engage the pool of freshwater experts in the Melanesian region to build capacity on regional freshwater biota data updating and mobilization. This will then contribute to inland wetland policy strengthening, national level ramsar commitments, National Biodiversity Strategic Assessment and Planning (NBSAP), Endangered and Protected Species (EPS) ACT Bill, Environment Management Act in Fiji for example, and eventually near future freshwater species and ecosystem Red Listing Assessments. The targeted countries are Fiji, the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu and Papua New Guinea.

€ {{ 88288 | localNumber }}
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Type of grant
Subvención regional
Duration
1 de julio de 2021 - 30 de junio de 2023
Project identifier
BID-PA2020-010-REG
Funded by
Partners
Contact details

Kelly Brown
The University of the South Pacific, Discipline of Marine Studies
School of Agriculture, Geography, environment, Ocean and Natural Sciences, USP Lower Campus
Laucala Bay Road
Suva
Fiji

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