• Home
  • People
    • Miguel Araújo
    • Lab members
  • Research
    • Projects
      • IberianPonds
      • Iberia Change
        • Data_Iberia
        • Data_Spain
      • Former projects
        • Bioimpacto
          • Summary
          • Goals
          • People
          • Publications
          • Outputs
        • Iberia Gap
          • Summary
          • Goals
          • People
          • Publications
          • Outputs
        • Ecochange
          • Summary
          • Goals
          • People
          • Publications
          • Outputs
        • ALARM
          • Summary
          • Goals
          • People
          • Outputs
            • Data
          • Website
        • MACIS
          • Summary
          • Goals
          • People
          • Publications
          • Outputs
          • Website
  • Publications
  • Consulting
  • Resources
    • Infrastructure
    • Data
    • Software
  • Links
    • Teaching
    • Data
    • Software
  • Blog
  • Contact

Miguel B. Araújo Lab

Predicting the effects of environmental change on biodiversity

You are here: Home / Projects / Former projects / Iberia Gap / Outputs

Outputs

IBIODAT
Taxonomic data are stored in specimen collections, museum records, and to a lesser extent in digitized databases. Too often, these sources contain incorrect taxonomic references and inaccurate geographical locations. Errors in taxonomic references usually arise because of changes in species nomenclatures. Geo-referencing errors tend to arise because of inaccuracies in the characterization of the locations where specimens were captured, and because collectors report locality names that later are changed. To solve these problems, we developed the IBIODAT software (Application for Homogenization Taxonomic Collections in the Iberian Peninsula). This application enables checking and correcting already digitized collections and also provides a tool for digitizing and geo-referencing old collections. In future versions the outputs of the application will follow the formats of the international agreements on taxonomic collections digitization (Darwin Core, GIBIF).

The application and its manual are freely available and can be downloaded here.

A FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) can also be downloaded here.

0.0
00

News

  • Dangerous levels of subterranean water consumption
  • Welcome Nuria Galiana
  • Miguel Araújo identified as Highly Cited 2020
  • Biophilia Award to The Guardian
  • FBBVA Biodiversity Conservation Awards - 15th edition

Outreach

  • The future of coastlands in the era of mega hurricanes
  • What will 2021 bring for biodiversity and conservation?
  • Presentation of CORESCAM project
  • Discriminating climate, land‐cover and random effects on species range dynamics
  • Talk to representatives of ministries of CPLP

Opportunities

  • First call AQUACOSM-PLUS
  • La Caixa Foundation PhD studentship on climate change and protected areas
  • Two Post docs: Ecology & Conservation
  • Post-doc: Effects of climate change extremes on Caribbean biodiversity
  • Post doc - Modelling the effects of climate change extremes on Caribbean biodiversity

Research Highlights

The evolution of critical thermal limits of life on Earth

Climate shapes community trophic structures and humans simplify them

The marine fish food web is globally connected

Standards for data and models in biodiversity assessments

The effect of multiple biotic interaction types on species persistence

Books

Ecological Niches and Geographic Distributions

Ecological Niches and Geographic Distributions

Atlas of Biodiversity Risk

Atlas of Biodiversity Risk

Spatial Conservation Prioritization

Spatial Conservation Prioritization

‹ ›
Visitors:

Copyright © 2021 · Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in