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Identification, Monitoring, Indicators and Assessments

Training for Biodiversity Indicator Development Facilitators

The Biodiversity Indicators Partnership is in the process of identifying potential Biodiversity Indicator Development Facilitators from across the world. Around 20 individuals will be selected to attend an initial 5-day workshop from the 22nd to 26th April 2013, where they will gain technical skills in indicator development as well as practical skills to enable them to facilitate successful workshops. Following this, they will return to their country to assist in facilitating national and sub-national indicator development workshops, with technical support from the Biodiversity Indicators Partnership secretariat and the use of the e-learning modules. There will be a second training and lesson learnt workshop for the Facilitators in late 2013.
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What's New

10 December 2012
Statement by Mr. Braulio F. de Souza Dias, CBD Executive Secretary, to the Biodiversity Indicators Partnership Meeting, Cambridge, UK, 10 December 2012. More »
27 May 2010
Press Release: The Arctic Biodiversity Assessment Another Wake Up Call for Action. More »

Notifications

6 September 2011 (2011-163)
Report of the AHTEG on indicators for the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020. More »
14 February 2011 (2011-031)
Survey on national indicators for implementation of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity. More »
16 March 2009 (2009-031)
Request to submit views on the scientific and technical aspects of the provisional framework of global headline indicators for assessing progress towards the achievement of the 2010 Biodiversity Target. More »

Our knowledge of biodiversity is still limited. Only one out of five to ten of all species is known to science. And even among the most well-known taxonomic groups - mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles and vascular plants - we do not know the population size, distribution or threat status for many. We still have many questions about the inherent dynamics of ecosystems and their functioning and cannot predict when gradual impact on an ecosystem reaches a threshold at which the state of the ecosystem changes dramatically and irreversibly.
To address these questions the Convention calls upon countries to identify components of biological diversity important for its conservation and sustainable use. It also indicates which components countries might need to focus on when designing biodiversity monitoring programmes:
  • Ecosystems and habitats containing high diversity, large numbers of endemic or threatened species, or wilderness; required by migratory species; of social, economic, cultural or scientific importance; or, which are representative, unique or associated with key evolutionary or other biological processes;
  • Species and communities which are threatened; wild relatives of domesticated or cultivated species; of medicinal, agricultural or other economic value; or social, scientific or cultural importance; or importance for research into the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity, such as indicator species; and
  • Described genomes and genes of social, scientific or economic importance.
Moreover, the Convention encourages countries to maintain and organize biodiversity information to facilitate future analyses and assessments. More »

  • United Nations
  • United Nations Environment Programme