In-depth review of the implementation of the programme of work for the
Global Taxonomy Initiative
The Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice recommends
that the Conference of the Parties, at its eighth meeting:
1. Welcomes the progress made in the implementation of the programme of
work for the Global Taxonomy Initiative, as reported in the note by the
Executive Secretary (UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/11/5) on the in-depth review of the
implementation of the programme of work for the Global Taxonomy Initiative;
2. Notes with appreciation the contributions to the Global Taxonomy
Initiative made by BioNET International, the Global Biodiversity Information
Facility, CABI International, the Integrated Taxonomic Information System
(ITIS) and Species 2000 and encourages these organizations and
initiatives to continue contributing to the implementation of the Convention;
3. Notes that some Parties and other Governments have made significant
progress in implementing activities pursuant to the programme of work for the
Global Taxonomy Initiative;
4. Emphasizes the need to build and retain capacity to address the
taxonomic impediment, and in this context, explore options to ensure the
long-term sustainability of the necessary financial support, including
possibility of the establishment of a special fund;
5. Recalling target 1 of the Global Strategy for Plant Conservation
("A widely accessible working list of known plant species, as a step
towards a complete world flora"), welcomes the progress made by
Species 2000, the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and collaborating partners
towards the achievement of target 1 of the Global Strategy for Plant
Conservation;
6. Adopts as a target under operational objective 2 of the programme of
work for the Global Taxonomy Initiative "A widely accessible working list
of known species, as a step towards a global register of plants, animals,
microorganisms and other organisms", bearing in mind the urgent need for
timely provision of scientific names of organisms to support implementation of
work under the Convention on Biological Diversity;
7. Requests the Executive Secretary to consult with relevant
organizations and funding agencies regarding the global taxonomic needs
assessment called for in planned activity 3 of the programme of work for Global
Taxonomy Initiative, in order to consider, inter alia, the scope of the
assessment, options for methodology, and potential implementing agencies, with
a view to completing the assessment as soon as possible, taking into account
users' needs;
8. Adopts the planned activities to support implementation of the
programmes of work on mountain biological diversity, invasive alien species,
protected areas, and island biological diversity contained in the annex to this
recommendation as complementary to the programme of work contained in the annex
to decision VI/8 and decides to incorporate them in the consolidation of
the decisions prepared in accordance with recommendation 1/2 (section I, para
4, and annex III) of the Ad Hoc Open-ended Working Group on Review of
Implementation of the Convention;
9. Urges Parties and other Governments that have not done so to:
(a) Establish national focal points for the Global Taxonomy Initiative;
(b) Undertake or complete, as a matter of priority, national taxonomic needs
assessments, including related technical, technological and capacity needs, and
establish priorities for taxonomic work that take into account country-specific
circumstances. These assessments should take into account ongoing national
biodiversity strategies and action plans as well as regional strategies and
initiatives under development, with particular regard to user needs and
priorities;
(c) Contribute, as appropriate, to regional and global taxonomic needs
assessments;
(d) Contribute, where possible, to the implementation of the planned activities
contained in the programme of work for the Global Taxonomy Initiative;
(e) Contribute, as appropriate, to initiatives facilitating the digitization of
information on specimens of natural history collections, noting the importance
of accessible data to support actions under the Convention;
10. Invites Parties, other Governments, and relevant organizations and
institutions to:
(a) Use and support existing mechanisms for strengthening collaboration and
communication among government agencies, the scientific community, research
institutions, universities, collection holders, the private sector and
stakeholders in order to improve the response to taxonomic needs for
decision-making;
(b) Promote taxonomy and taxonomic products and related research as a
cornerstone for inventory and monitoring of biological diversity in the
framework of the implementation of the Convention and to achieve its
objectives;
(c) Develop and implement strategies to support the taxonomic research necessary
to implement the Convention;
(d) Develop and implement capacity-building activities related to the Global
Taxonomy Initiative, such as training in the areas of identification of taxa,
information exchange and database management, taking into account national and
region-specific needs;
(e) Mobilize financial and technical resources to assist developing countries,
in particular least developed and small island developing States, and countries
with economies in transition, as well as those that are mega diverse, to build
and maintain systems and significant institutional infrastructure in order to
adequately obtain, collate and curate biological specimens as well as to
facilitate information exchange, including repatriation of information, on
their biodiversity;
(f) Promote cooperation and networking at national, regional and global levels
in support of capacity-building activities related to the Global Taxonomy
Initiative, in accordance with Articles 18 and 15 of the Convention, by, inter
alia, making information available through the clearing-house mechanism
and other means;
(g) Provide, within the framework of the terms of reference contained in
decision V/9, clear guidance to national focal points for the Global Taxonomy
Initiative on duties and specific tasks to better communicate and promote the
objectives of the Initiative, working in collaboration with other stakeholders
and in accordance with country needs;
(h) Facilitate, as appropriate, the integration of taxonomic information on
nationally held collections in regional and global databases and information
systems;
11. Requests the Executive Secretary
to:
(a) Continue collaborating with relevant conventions, organizations and
institutions, and to foster synergies between relevant processes and
programmes, in order to make available taxonomic information, expertise and
relevant technologies needed to achieve the objectives of the Convention on
Biological Diversity, noting in particular, taxonomic priorities at national,
regional and global levels;
(b) Continue collaborating with existing initiatives, including the Global
Biodiversity Information Facility, the Integrated Taxonomic Information System
and Species 2000, to develop the Electronic Catalogue of Names of Known
Organisms and the Catalogue of Life;
(c) Continue collaborating with existing initiatives, including those of BioNET
International, the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, IUCN, and CAB
International, to develop the human capacities, tools and infrastructure needed
to support implementation of the programme of work on the GTI;
(d) Undertake, as part of the Global Initiative on Communication, Education and
Public Awareness programme and in collaboration with relevant partners,
activities demonstrating the importance of taxonomy for the general public,
including information on products, lessons learned, and accomplishments of
taxonomy-related projects, and activities encouraging public participation,
recognizing the importance of amateur naturalists and local people as a source
of expertise;
(e) Develop, in consultation with the GTI Coordination Mechanism, other relevant
consultative bodies, stakeholders and organizations, for each of the planned
activities of the programme of work on the GTI, specific taxonomic,
outcome-oriented deliverables to be considered as additions under "(ii)
Outputs" with a timeline for possible consideration by the Conference of
the Parties at its ninth meeting;
(f) Report to the ninth meeting of the Conference of the Parties on progress
made towards the target for the programme of work as specified in paragraph 6
above;
(g) Include the Global Taxonomy Initiative in the joint work plan between the
secretariats of the Convention on Biological Diversity and the International
Plant Protection Convention, with a view to exploring synergies in the work
under the two Conventions, with particular regard to invasive alien species;
12. Requests the Global Environment Facility to continue to support the
implementation of the planned activities contained in the programme of work on
the Global Taxonomy Initiative, including taxonomic needs assessments, projects
with a taxonomic focus or clearly identified taxonomic components, and regional
activities on taxonomic capacity development and technology transfer;
13. Urges the Global Environment Facility to consider development of
simplified procedures to minimize the time required to process project
proposals related to the Global Taxonomy Initiative,
14. Further requests the Global Environment Facility to provide financial
resources to developing countries, in particular small island developing
states, and countries with economies in transition, to install and make
operational their national focal points for the Global Taxonomy Initiative, as
well as financial resources to support capacity-building activities such as, inter
alia, taxonomic training related to specific taxa and information
technologies;
15. Requests the secretariats of the Convention and the Global
Environment Facility to conduct a joint analysis of funded GTI-related projects
and relevant project information contained in national reports, including
analysis of the resources directed specifically to capacity-building, with a
view to extracting best practices and sharing information and experience in
promoting financial support for the Initiative;
16. Requests the secretariats of the Convention and the Global
Environment Facility to convene, with support from relevant organizations, in
particular the Implementing Agencies of the Facility, a projectdevelopment
seminar aimed primarily for those countries that have already identified
taxonomic needs or that have submitted proposals for pilot projects under the
Global Taxonomy Initiative, to promote formulation of country-driven projects
based on identified taxonomic needs and to explore potential benefits of
developing new, and enhancing existing, regional or global projects to address
common taxonomic needs that have already been identified.
Annex
ADDITIONAL PLANNED ACTIVITIES
I. PLANNED ACTIVITY: MOUNTAIN BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
(i) Rationale
1. The taxonomic composition of mountain biodiversity varies with the
biogeographic region, the latitude and the altitude of the mountain as well as
with the relief. In some cases, mountains provide a necessary seasonal resource
for organisms at other times found in lowland biomes. Furthermore most groups
of organisms have representatives in the lowland as well as in montane region,
and so a vast range of groups of organisms is encountered rather than a few
taxonomic groups. Consequently, montane regions are often hot spots of
biodiversity, which renders their full taxonomic treatment a challenge and
requires many actors and experts for different organisms.
2. As most mountain ranges extend over considerable length and area, a regional
approach to mountain biodiversity is of paramount importance, and relevant
information is available in many different databases and inventories.
Therefore, the Global Taxonomy Initiative can contribute to the mountain
biodiversity programme of work in several ways, including collating relevant
information and expertise.
(ii) Outputs
3. An increased knowledge of the species composition of mountains through
national taxonomic studies and inventories. The Global Taxonomy Initiative
could aid the programme of work on mountain biological diversity through:
(a) Working lists of organisms - assembling working lists of organisms
occurring in montane areas including their vernacular names, with reference to
altitude and relief;
(b) Working identification keys - producing identification keys in
printed and electronic form useful for the conservation, monitoring and
sustainable use of organisms in montane areas;
(c) Dissemination of data - distributing the working lists and keys as
widely as possible to increase their usefulness;
(d) Human resources - address and support taxonomic experts to encourage
their participation in relevant training programmes, and supporting the
establishment of local reference and data collections of montane biota;
(e) Hot spots and protected areas - providing relevant taxonomic
information, infrastructure and human resources to identify hot spots of
mountain biodiversity and to establish and monitor protected areas.
(iii) Timing
4. As current knowledge of mountain biodiversity is still inadequate, the Global
Taxonomy Initiative will make an ongoing effort to develop and improve working
lists and working identification keys for montane organisms. Within the next
three years, it will attempt to develop taxonomic guides, computerized lists of
montane organisms, and identification keys in consultation with appropriate
national taxonomy and management agencies.
(iv) Actors
5. The mountain biodiversity programme of work identified many relevant actors,
such as Global Mountain Biodiversity Assessment (GMBA) of DIVERSITAS, Mountain
Partnership, Mountain Forum, BioNET-INTERNATIONAL (to organize regional loops),
the FAO for agricultural aspects, the clearinghouse mechanism of the Convention
and the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), the Global Environment
Facility (GEF) and national funding bodies for financial support, the Global
Strategy for Plant Conservation (GSPC) (for plants), national organizations and
nature conservation agencies including relevant non-governmental organizations,
local communities, and many others.
6. The scientific community with past and current research programmes on
mountain biodiversity and the natural history museums with specimens collected
over decades hold a key role in providing the expertise and relevant
information and should actively be included.
(v) Mechanisms
7. Existing mechanisms, such as the clearing house mechanism and Coordination
Mechanism of the Global Taxonomy Initiative, Mountain Partnership, and Mountain
Forum, and GBIF could be used to coordinate and promote the efforts.
(vi) Financial, human resources and other capacity requirements
8. Financial, human resource and capacity building require funds to be
identified within existing and new projects, as well as additional resources to
be made available to increase technical capacity in developing countries.
(vii) Pilot projects
9. Pilot projects could be built on information for a number of montane regions
of the world, such as the Alps, the Andes, the Himalayas, the Eastern Arc to
produce the outputs in short term and to evaluate their usefulness. The Global
Taxonomy Initiative could address, inter alia, the needs of local and
regional capacitybuilding by coordinating workshops in collaboration with
mountain partnership, Mountain Forum and DIVERSITAS, focussing on mountain
biodiversity conservation and monitoring.
II. PLANNED ACTIVITY: INVASIVE ALIEN SPECIES
(i) Rationale
10. Prevention and mitigation of the impacts of invasive alien species often
relies on timely access to taxonomic expertise, and to taxonomic resources such
as identification tools, information on species names, and biological reference
collections. For many pathways of introductions for invasive alien species,
effective prevention and mitigation may depend on detection and monitoring
activities that are undertaken at sub-regional, regional or even global levels.
Consequently, taxonomic capacities and information need to be accessible to all
countries in order to support effective prevention and mitigation of potential
impacts of invasive alien species. Better characterization of species through
research can be key to prediction, early detection and monitoring of invasions.
Better baseline taxonomic information on biological diversity in areas that are
exposed or vulnerable to key invasion pathways (e.g., marine ports) can
facilitate early detection of changes in species composition that may result
from invasive alien species. In addition, taxonomic expertise can be important
in the development of biological control measures which may be considered by
decision-makers for addressing invasive alien species in particular cases.
(ii) Outputs
11. Outputs should comprise:
(a) Databases of invasive alien species and occurrences of invasions, developed
and/or expanded, and made widely available;
(b) Working identification keys for known invasive alien species associated with
key invasion pathways produced and disseminated;
(c) Working lists of organisms
in areas that are exposed or susceptible
to key invasion pathways produced and utilized by local monitoring authorities.
(iii) Timing
12. Databases further developed and/or expanded and made widely available within
two years. Working identification keys for known invasive alien species
produced and disseminated within three years. Working lists of organisms in
areas that are exposed or susceptible to key invasion pathways produced and
utilized within three years.
(iv) Actors
13. Database development - IUCN Species Survival Commission (SSC) Invasive
Species Specialist Group, Global Invasive Species Information Network,
clearing-house mechanism of the Convention, ITIS, IABIN, GBIF, Species 2000,
BioNET-INTERNATIONAL. Identification keys - scientific community, national
Governments, natural history museums. Working lists of organisms in areas that
are exposed or susceptible to key invasion pathways - national governments,
national and regional organizations including non-governmental organizations.
(v) Mechanisms
14. Coordinated efforts at the national and global levels by the actors
identified above will be an important mechanism. In addition, existing
mechanisms, such as the clearing-house mechanism of the Convention and the GBIF
can function as information portals.
(vi) Financial and human resources and other capacity requirements
15. Financial, human-resource and capacity building require resources to be
identified within existing and new projects, as well as additional resources to
be made available to increase technical capacity in developing countries. GEF
and national funding organisations would be important sources of financial
support.
III. PLANNED ACTIVITY: PROTECTED AREAS
(i) Rationale
16. Taxonomic expertise and information constitute key requirements for
conservation planning and sustainable natural resource management. This is
especially true in the case of protected areas, which are established with the
goal to conserve a significant part of natural biodiversity, but usually based
on limited knowledge or available information about the biodiversity they
actually contain. With no complete species inventory currently available for
any existing or planned larger protected area and relevant taxonomic,
distributional and biological information about many taxa with high
conservation value still missing, it will be difficult to achieve meaningful
conservation planning. The objective of the programme of work on protected
areas is to support the establishment of ecologically representative and
effectively managed national and regional systems of protected areas. Activity
1.1.2 of the programme of work specifically calls for establishing protected
areas in any large, intact or highly irreplaceable natural areas, as well as
areas securing the most threatened species, and activity 1.1.5 requests that
gap analyses at national and regional levels of the representativeness of the
protected area system be undertaken (by 2006). The GTI could play an important
role particularly for the identification, establishment and management of
protected areas (decision VII/28, annex, programme element 1) through focusing
on biodiversity inventories and gap analysis of existing inventories, and in
the development of standards for managing and monitoring protected areas
(decision VII/28, annex, programme element 4) through facilitating assessments
and comparisons of different taxonomic components of biodiversity covered and
sustained through the existing network of protected areas. In light of threats
to protected areas through climate change and invasive alien species, it is
important to understand current constraints on species and populations, and how
these would determine distribution under changing conditions. Access to
accurate information on current distributions and ability to model these is
important for appropriate management and policy development.
(ii) Outputs
17. Improved and augmented biodiversity inventories of protected areas of all
kinds, also to be expanded into monitoring efforts to record changes of species
and populations over time. Taxonomic guides for key invertebrate organisms,
lower plants and microorganisms, economically important and threatened species.
Information on current distribution and occurrence of important species in
protected areas, including population trends. Identification of habitats and
priority setting for establishing new protected areas, through plotting
distributions of species at local, national and regional levels. Mobilization
and augmentation of specimen and observational-level data pertaining to species
to allow modelling of current distributions and distributions under different
models of climate change and of other biotic and a biotic changes (e.g.
land-use change, invasive species).
(iii) Timing
18. The target date for activity 1.1.5, on conducting gap analysis is 2006. The
target date for goal 4.3 (to assess and monitor protected area status and
trends) and goal 4.4 (to ensure that scientific knowledge contributes to the
establishment and effectiveness of protected areas) of the programme of work is
2010. Hence, outputs need to be produced within the next four years, but
efforts will need to be ongoing.
(iv) Actors
19. National agencies and local authorities concerned with protected area
administration and management in concert with taxonomic institutions,
especially natural history museums, biosystematics units at universities and
other research institutions, botanic gardens and culture collections, and the
IUCN Species Survival Commission, together with nature conservation agencies
including international non-governmental organizations such as Conservation
International, BirdLife International, Flora and Fauna International, WWF, the
World Resources Institute (WRI), and local communities. Parataxonomists could
also play an important role. Other actors include the clearing-house mechanism
of the Convention and GBIF (as data portals), GEF and national funding
organizations for financial support, and BioNET-INTERNATIONAL (to organize
regional loops). Other biodiversity conventions, including the Ramsar
Convention on Wetlands, the World Heritage Convention, the Convention on
Migratory Species, and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), and the UNESCO Man and the Biosphere
(MAB) biosphere reserve programme could also play an important role. Direct
linkages to relevant ongoing or planned taxonomy-related, capacity building
projects should also be implemented, e.g., the International Pollinator
Initiative (IPI), the Census of Marine Life (CoML), the Botanical/Zoological
Network for Eastern Africa, the Partnerships of Enhancing Expertise in Taxonomy
(PEET), and the recently proposed European Distributed Institute for Taxonomy
(EDIT).
(v) Mechanisms
20. Coordinated effort at national and global levels by the actors identified
above will be an important mechanism. Mobilisation of extant data and their
presentation in an appropriate manner, with the development of the analytical
tools, is required. The need for identification keys, inventories and primary
data must be communicated effectively to the key agencies and funding bodies,
with an indication of priority.
(vi) Financial, human resources and other capacity requirements
21. Insofar as the requirements need a focus cutting across traditional work
processes and patterns of the data providers, funding will be required that is
focussed at meeting the identified needs.
(vii) Pilot projects
22. Stimulate and undertake efforts to carry out All-Taxon Biodiversity
Inventories (ATBIs) in existing or planned protected areas. Gap analyses of
representative taxa found in protected areas, in the context of the
distribution and presence of those taxa at other sites nationally and
regionally, demonstrating the development and use of such analyses in protected
area selection and management. Mobilization of primary occurrence data of
species in a protected area, provision of these data to country of origin, and
analysis of distributions using a niche modelling system.
IV. ISLAND BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
23. As noted in SBSTTA recommendation X/1, paragraph6, islands incorporate all
the thematic areas (coastal and marine biological diversity, forest biological
diversity, inland water biological diversity, dry and sub humid land biological
diversity, mountain biological diversity and agricultural al biological
diversity) considered under the Convention. Thus, the planned activities
already identified under operational objectives 4 (on thematic programmes of
work) and 5 (relating to work on cross cutting issues) in the GTI programme of
work (decision VI/8, annex, planned activities 8-18) already identified for
thematic and cross cutting programmes of work could also be considered to
generate taxonomic information needed for the conservation of island biological
diversity, sustainable use of its components and fair and equitable sharing of
benefits arising from its use.
24. However, recognizing the current alarming rate of loss of island biological
diversity in both biodiversity "hot" and "cool" spots; that
due to their isolation, island environments are witnessing a unique evolution
of often endemic and characteristic flora and fauna; that islands are
microcosms of their continental counterparts; that vulnerability of small
islands require not only special but urgent attention, special support is
needed to islands, in particular small islands, to implement, as a matter of
urgency, the planned activities 8 to18 of the GTI programme of work. In
addition, for small islands in particular, regional approaches to meeting
taxonomic needs and building capacity should be emphasized.