Keeping track of Alberta’s living heritage

Preview:

Citation preview

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Keeping track of Alberta’s living heritage

Kurt Illerbrun, PhDABMI Northern Communications Advisor

BAW03 Summer Series, June 25, 2017

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Note:

All photographs in this presentation remain the property of the respective originalphotographers. Hyperlinks or credits are provided for non-ABMI photographs.Uncredited photos are from the ABMI staff photo archive, and detailed information is available on request.

2

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Outline

• Biodiversity monitoring at the ABMI• The other kind of biomimicry• Tying it all together (or at least trying to)

3

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

ABMI 101

4

Why are we?

http://globalforestwatch.ca/sites/gfwc/files/images/20040119A_forestry_2.jpg

http://i.huffpost.com/gen/4597900/images/o-OIL-DRILLING-ALBERTA-facebook.jpg

https://www.desmog.ca/sites/beta.desmogblog.com/files/styles/full_width_blog_image/public/blogimages/Suncor%20oilsands.jpg?itok=Xhe5DH2u

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

ABMI 101

5

Responsible land and resource stewardship isn’t optional.

“License to operate”

• Government is accountable to Albertans to maintain environmental values:o Many commitments at the local, provincial,

and national scales

• Industry wants stable access to resources, markets, capital

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 6

Cumulative effects or targeted monitoring?• Targeted monitoring is efficient but lacks ‘big picture’• Cumulative effects monitoring is bigger picture; e.g., allows

separate assessment of different sectors’ effects

Establishing the ABMI created the first provincial environmental monitoring system. The system enables:• Setting clear environmental outcomes• Measuring progress against outcomes• Assessing efficient management responses

ABMI 101

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 7

“We track changes in Alberta’s wildlife and habitats from border to border, and provide ongoing, relevant, scientifically credible information on Alberta’s living resources. For Alberta’s land-use decision makers. For Albertans.”

ABMI 101

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

ABMI 101

8

What are we?

- Arms-length, not-for-profit scientific organization- BoD composed of key stakeholders: government,

agriculture, energy, academia, forestry, ENGO’s…- Value-neutral: provide info but don’t make management

decisions

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

ABMI 101

9

Who are we and what do we do?- 70+ full time employees;

another 50+ seasonal—all aspects of the data ‘life cycle’

- 1656-site grid to monitor status and trend of 3000+ species…

- …and satellite + aerial imagery to monitor human footprint

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Data collection…

10

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Data collection…

11

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Data collection…

12

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Data collection…

13

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Data collection…

14

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Data collection…

15

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Data collection…

16

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Data processing…

17

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Data analysis…

18

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 19

Data dissemination…

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 20

Data dissemination…

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 21

Data engagement…

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 22

Data engagement…

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 23

Data engagement…

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 24

Data engagement…

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 25

Data engagement…

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Why?

26

“License to operate”

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 27

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

“Biomimicry”

28

Moondigger

Lukas Kaffer

Sputnikcccp

Children’s museum media collection

http://www.fusedjaw.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/SeaDragon.jpg

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

“Biomimicry”

29

http://cdn2-www.webecoist.momtastic.com/assets/uploads/2010/02/western-skunk-cabbage.jpg

http://cdn2-www.webecoist.momtastic.com/assets/uploads/2010/02/caladium-fake-illness.jpg

http://cdn2-www.webecoist.momtastic.com/assets/uploads/2010/02/passion-flower-mimicry.jpg

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

“Biomimicry”

30

Monarch Viceroy

Hoverfly

http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/imgmay07/eupeodes_latifasciatus2.jpg

https://articles.extension.org//sites/default/files/styles/large/public/yellowjacket3.jpg

Yellowjackethttps://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/e4/51/36/e451365bda4c5b88f660ef0cd589312d.jpg

DragonflyIssuesinEvolution13

(Batesian mimicry)

http://www.asnailsodyssey.com/IMAGES/NUDIBRANCH/FlabMimicry.jpg

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

“Biomimicry”

31

https://confessionsofanentomologist.files.wordpress.com/2015/08/velvet-ants.jpeg

http://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S096098220901389X-gr1.jpg

(Müllerian mimicry)

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

“Biomimicry”

32

Hannes Freitaghttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/wol1/doi/10.1002/ece3.2586/full

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

“Biomimicry”

33

By Letrek - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=290058By User:Bluemoose - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=333105

(Vavilovian mimicry)

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Always a constraint…

34

Adaptation is opportunistic

a) Adaptation is limited to selection among inherited traits already present in the population

…so…

b) Present traits limit evolutionary pathways, i.e. they constrain the “options” available to “solve” ecological/evolutionary problems

E.g. the panda’s thumb

http://conservationreport.files.wordpress.com/2008/10/dying-leaf-mimic-katydid.jpg?w=560&h=420

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2179/2092798784_f26db83eed_o.jpg

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Always a constraint…

35

E.g. the panda’s thumb

Digits 1-5 are specialized for running and clawing

Simple genetic change: bigger radial sesamoid (wrist bone)

Individuals with bigger RS were presumably more efficient at eating bamboo, and therefore had ↑ fitness

modern ancestor

RSRS

Radial sesamoid

12

3

4

5

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute 36

Pressure: the common theme

We work with what we have

The ABMI’s resources may be useful to you—please check them out!

Lessons learned

It’s Our Nature to KnowAlberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute

Thanks!

37

abmi.caabmi.ca/datanaturelynx.ca

Questions/comments?

Recommended