Rio+20 marine biodiversity

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Special Side Event on Oceans UN Conference on Sustainable Development One Planet, One Ocean 20 June 2012, 09.00-10.30 Venue: T-9 (RioCentro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) Theme: Knowing our Ocean Prepared by: Patricia Miloslavich – Universidad Simón Bolívar, Venezuela Status of our knowledge on ocean biodiversity, gaps, and potential for discovery Ocean life is extremely diverse, connected, and under severe pressure from human activities. The first baseline of information of what lives in the ocean is contained in the world’s largest online repository of open-access, geo-referenced data which is the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS). OBIS is a legacy of the Census of Marine Life (www.coml.org), a program that significantly advanced our knowledge of marine biodiversity, distribution, and abundance in the last decade (2000-2010). OBIS is presently under the umbrella of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (UNESCO) global data system which compiles data on marine species and their locations that serves researchers, students, and policymakers, helping them to identify areas that remain unexplored and where more research might be targeted (www.iobis.org).

Map showing the density of observations by 5x5 degree squares in the OBIS database. Darker (red) squares indicate higher density of records. Observations are most numerous in shallow waters, near the coast, and near or between developed nations. The Southern Pacific shows a huge gap in knowledge. Image: Edward Vanden Berghe, Ocean Biogeographic Information System. Data updated in May, 2012

The estimate of known marine species is nearly 250,000. This known diversity represents only a fraction of the real biodiversity, not only because the vast majority of the ocean still remains unexplored (estimates range up to 95%) but because new species discoveries continue even in


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Rio+20 marine biodiversity by Christina Dian Parmionova - Issuu