Abstract
Since the Convention on Biological Diversity in 1992, biodiversity has become an important topic for scientific research. Much of this research focuses on measuring and mapping the current state of biodiversity in terms of which species are present where, and how abundantly, and making extrapolations and future projections—that is, determining the trends needed for forest and nature governance. Biodiversity databases are crucial components of these activities because they store information about biodiversity and make it digitally available. For biodiversity databases to be useful, the data they contain must be reliable, standardised, and fit for upscaling. This chapter uses material from the EBONE project (European Biodiversity Observation Network) to illustrate how biodiversity databases are constructed, how data are negotiated and scaled, and how biodiversity is globalised. The findings show there is continuous interplay between scientific ideals related to objectivity and pragmatic considerations related to feasibility and data availability. A crucial feature of the discussions was statistics. It also proved to be the main device in upscaling the data. The material presented shows that biodiversity is approached in an abstract, quantitative, and technical way by a group of scientists, mostly ecologists, in a highly contextual setting, disconnected from the species and habitats that make up biodiversity and the people involved in collecting the data. Globalising biodiversity involves decontextualisation and standardisation. This chapter argues that while this is important if the results of projects like EBONE are to be usable in different contexts, there is a risk involved, as these processes may lead to the alienation of the organisations and volunteers who collect the data upon which these projects rely. If these abstract representations of biodiversity become normalised, this may result in a detached understanding of biodiversity itself and our relationships with it.
An earlier version of this chapter was published as Turnhout and Boonman-Berson (2011) Databases, scaling practices and the globalization of biodiversity. Ecology and Society, article no. 35, http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol16/iss1/art35/
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Notes
- 1.
- 2.
The authors are indebted to Steve Woolgar who introduced the term ‘scaling device’ at the ‘Scaleography’ workshop, Oxford, 8 July, 2009.
- 3.
Such as those developed in earlier European Framework projects like ALTERNET, BioHab and EuMon.
- 4.
Most of the species data come from country-based recording organisations and monitoring schemes. The habitat data come from different habitat monitoring schemes, such as the Countryside Survey (UK), NILS (Sweden), SISPARES (Spain) and SINUS (Austria). The habitat data will be integrated using the habitat categories of the BioHab project.
- 5.
EBONE has ten work packages. For more information see http:www.ebone.wur.nl/UK.
- 6.
Using strata is a way to ensure that all relevant categories are sampled. In the case of biodiversity, meaningful strata are often based on habitat, soil type, biotope or land use classifications.
- 7.
This refers to the EU Habitats Directive. Annex 1 contains a list of habitat types for which EU member states are obliged to take protective measures.
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Boonman-Berson, S., Turnhout, E. (2012). Globalising Biodiversity: Scientific Practices of Scaling and Databasing. In: Arts, B., Behagel, J., van Bommel, S., de Koning, J., Turnhout, E. (eds) Forest and Nature Governance. World Forests, vol 14. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5113-2_9
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