629befd5-fb45-4365-95c4-d07e72479b37 https://ipt.biodiversity.be/resource?r=natagora-alien-occurrences Observations.be - Non-native species occurrences in Wallonia, Belgium Jean-Yves Paquet Natagora Head of Study Departement
BE
jean-yves.paquet@natagora.be https://www.natagora.be 0000-0002-2068-7976
Louis Bronne Natagora Database officer
BE
louis.bronne@natagora.be https://www.natagora.be 0000-0002-3396-184X
Lien Reyserhove Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO)
BE
lien.reyserhove@inbo.be 0000-0001-7484-9267
Peter Desmet Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO)
BE
0000-0002-8442-8025
Louis Bronne Natagora Database officer
BE
louis.bronne@natagora.be https://www.natagora.be 0000-0002-3396-184X
Jean-Yves Paquet Natagora Head of Study Departement
BE
jean-yves.paquet@natagora.be https://www.natagora.be 0000-0002-2068-7976
Lien Reyserhove Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO) Data Publisher
BE
lien.reyserhove@inbo.be 0000-0001-7484-9267
Peter Desmet Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO)
BE
0000-0002-8442-8025
2020-07-13 eng Observations.be - Non-native species occurrences in Wallonia, Belgium is a species occurrence dataset published by Natagora. The dataset contains over 150,000 occurrences of 324 animal, 1,169 plant and 1 fungal non-native species, recorded by volunteers (citizen scientists), mainly since 2008. The occurrences are derived from the database http://www.observations.be, an initiative from the nature conservation NGO Natagora (https://www.natagora.be) in collaboration with Stichting Natuurinformatie and Natuurpunt. Standardized information regarding the occurrence's sex, reproductiveCondition, behavior, occurrenceRemarks, and samplingProtocol is included as well. Issues with the dataset can be reported at https://github.com/trias-project/natagora-alien-occurrences Generalized and/or withheld information: for some occurrences, location information is generalized to grid cells, as requested by the observer (usually to avoid disturbance or collecting). Observer name, toponyms, and photographs are not included in the published dataset, but are known in the source database. We have released this dataset to the public domain under a Creative Commons Zero waiver. We would appreciate however, if you read and follow these norms for data use (https://www.natagora.be/donnees_naturalistes_usage) and provide a link to the original data set whenever possible. If you use these data for a scientific paper, please cite the dataset following the applicable citation norms and/or consider us for co-authorship. We are always interested to provide more information or know how you have used the data, so please contact us via the contact information provided in the metadata or via biodata@natagora.be. Occurrence; non-native species; citizen science; Natagora; observations.be; observation.org; Wallonia GBIF Dataset Type Vocabulary: http://rs.gbif.org/vocabulary/gbif/dataset_type.xml Observation GBIF Dataset Subtype Vocabulary: http://rs.gbif.org/vocabulary/gbif/dataset_subtype.xml non-native species invasive species exotic species plants animals fungi Wallonia observations citizen science Natagora observations.be observation.org n/a To the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the Public Domain (CC0 1.0). Users may copy, modify, distribute and use the work, including for commercial purposes, without restriction. https://observations.be/ Walloon Region. This region is located in the south of Belgium and covers an area of 16,844 km². 2.785 6.41 50.823 49.49 1925-08-31 2020-06-30 kingdom Plantae Plants kingdom Animalia Animals kingdom Fungi Fungi biannually Louis Bronne Natagora Database officer
BE
louis.bronne@natagora.be https://www.natagora.be 0000-0002-3396-184X
Not provided See geographic coverage. The observations (species, date, location, observer) were recorded by volunteers (citizen scientists) at http://www.observations.be. The dataset is a mixture of presence-only data and checklists. Recorded data are constantly verified by species group specialists (including professionals) taking collection specimens, the observer’s species knowledge, added photographs and known species list of locations into account. The validation procedure from observations.be consists of an interactive procedure in which observers can be asked for additional information by a team of validators, after which the validator manually adds a validation status. Records that are not manually validated are additionally checked by an automated validation procedure that takes into account the number of manually validated observations within a specified date and distance range. The validation status is indicated in the field identificationVerificationStatus, the link to the original record is in references. Tracking Invasive Alien Species (TrIAS) Tim Adriaens 0000-0001-7268-4200 author Peter Desmet 0000-0002-8442-8025 author Quentin Groom 0000-0002-0596-5376 principalInvestigator Diederik Strubbe 0000-0002-2613-4985 author Sonia Vanderhoeven 0000-0002-6298-5373 author Imagine a future where dynamically, from year to year, we can track the progression of alien species (AS), identify emerging species, assess their current and future risk and timely inform policy in a seamless data-driven workflow. One that is built on open science and open data infrastructures. By using international biodiversity standards and facilities, we would ensure interoperability, repeatability and sustainability. This would make the process adaptable to future requirements in an evolving IAS policy landscape both locally and internationally. The project Tracking Invasive Alien Species (TrIAS) aims to do this for Belgium. For a full project description, see Vanderhoeven et al. (2017, https://doi.org/10.3897/rio.3.e13414). TrIAS is funded by the Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO) call for Belgian Research Action through Interdisciplinary Networks (BRAIN). Belgium. The project builds on two components: 1) The establishment of a data mobilization framework for alien species data from diverse data sources and 2) the development of data-driven procedures for risk evaluation based on risk modelling, risk mapping and risk assessment. TrIAS uses facilities from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF, http://www.gbif.org), standards from the Biodiversity Information Standards organization (TDWG, http://www.tdwg.org) and expertise from the Open science lab for biodiversity (https://twitter.com/oscibio) to create and facilitate a systematic workflow. Alien species data are gathered from a large set of regional, national and international initiatives, including citizen science data, with a wide taxonomic scope from marine, terrestrial and freshwater environments. Observation data are funnelled in repeatable ways to GBIF. In parallel, a Belgian checklist of alien species is established, benefiting from various taxonomic and project-based checklists foreseen for GBIF publication.
2019-05-26T22:01:21.127+00:00 dataset Paquet J, Bronne L, Reyserhove L, Desmet P (2020): Observations.be - Non-native species occurrences in Wallonia, Belgium. v1.4. Natagora. Dataset/Occurrence. https://doi.org/10.15468/p58ip1 Vanderhoeven S, Adriaens T, Desmet P, Strubbe D, Backeljau T, Barbier Y, Brosens D, Cigar J, Coupremanne M, De Troch R, Eggermont H, Heughebaert A, Hostens K, Huybrechts P, Jacquemart A, Lens L, Monty A, Paquet J, Prévot C, Robertson T, Termonia P, Van De Kerchove R, Van Hoey G, Van Schaeybroeck B, Vercayie D, Verleye T, Welby S, Groom Q (2017) Tracking Invasive Alien Species (TrIAS): Building a data-driven framework to inform policy. Research Ideas and outcomes 3: e13414. https://ipt.biodiversity.be/logo.do?r=natagora-alien-occurrences 629befd5-fb45-4365-95c4-d07e72479b37/v1.4.xml