Why this site?

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Blackbuck
Credit: ATREE
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  • India is home to an exceptionally high level of biodiversity, and to nearly one-fifth of the world’s human population.
  • Just 17 of the world’s 170-some countries contain 70 percent of its biodiversity, earning them the title “megadiverse.” India is one of these megadiverse countries.
  • Unfortunately, India also has three of 34 “global biodiversity hotspots” - unique, biologically rich areas which are facing severe conservation threats.

The rapid rate of hotspot degradation makes it imperative that conservation science be pursued immediately and vigorously in these habitats, to devise effective measures which curtail the rapidly diminishing biodiversity, and to protect unique biota from the onslaught of humanity.

Immense Potential
The value of this biodiversity is immense (including economic, social and cultural) and its potential future value is far greater. To take an example, the ecosystem services from the forested watersheds of two great mountain chains, the Himalayas and the Western Ghats, indirectly support several million people in India. The economic value of such ecosystem services is immense. The non-timber forest products alone have been estimated to be worth $200 million per year. The existing biodiversity also has the further potential to add billions of dollars to the country’s economy, in new products from its unique species, and from services such as ecotourism. Information about biodiversity combined with India’s expertise in information technology and emerging strength in biotechnology has the immense potential to increase the current and future value of the country’s biodiversity.  

Comprehensive Information
Biodiversity information is more than information on species. It includes genes, species, communities, biomes and abiotic factors. Thus for comprehensive information on biodiversity, we are working to include information on many aspects of biodiversity. We also plan to include the human community and their interactions with the environment, specifically on biodiversity.  

Biodiversity and ecosystems data are both geo-referenced and species referenced. All biodiversity and conservation information is, by definition, spatial in nature, located in a particular geography. Thus organizing, sharing and analyzing biodiversity information is largely and effectively driven by spatial technologies.

Aggregate Wisdom
We are working on the principle that biodiversity informatics should harness collective intelligence, exploit the long tail of information, and aggregate the wisdom of the crowd.

We believe, map-based systems working on the principle of the wiki could evoke democratic participative action. We hope to expand biodiversity knowledge by this web-based collaborative network which solicits broad-based participation from people, government, research institutions and conservation NGOs, interconnects existing databases and makes them readily accessible by all stakeholders interactively.