From 5e89bd5e97915fe28fc5c8086e9f56e37bf4d2a6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: PMA Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2024 16:09:32 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Dendron workspace sync ## Synced vaults: - dendron-dbgi Dendron version: 0.124.0 Hostname: MacBook-Pro-de-pma.local --- vault/wbf2024.notes.md | 219 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 218 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/vault/wbf2024.notes.md b/vault/wbf2024.notes.md index c7e25e3f4ca..d52a7823e75 100644 --- a/vault/wbf2024.notes.md +++ b/vault/wbf2024.notes.md @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ id: 97mugbiwyy4ks7vodennm9d title: Notes desc: '' -updated: 1718635853976 +updated: 1718880471350 created: 1718621457733 --- @@ -195,4 +195,221 @@ Speaker: Joseph Cornelius (Lugano, Switzerland) Discussion Session SCICOM_15.1 +ChatGPT alternatives + +Gemini (google) +Ecosia chat + +### Wednesday 19 June 2024 + +Daniel Schrag +Professor of Geology, Professor of Environmental Science and Engineering, and Co-Director of the Science, Technology, and Public Policy Program at the Harvard University, schrag@eps.harvard.edu + + +Parallel Session (oral) +Sertig +Wednesday, June 19, 09:30 – 11:00 +PHIETH_9.1a Philosophies of biodiversity conservation +In this session we welcome contributions that discuss different questions concerning biodiversity conservation from the perspective of philosophy, ethics and political theory. Particularly welcome are papers that address the general theme of the conference, from science to action. Potential other topics include: +• The philosophy of valuing and protecting biodiversity +• Justice and politics in biodiversity conservation, including such issues as ownership of genetic resources, democracy and biodiversity, transparency of biodiversity data, bio/ecosecurity +• Ethical analysis of different conservation techniques and strategies such as de-extinction, natural vs. artificial biodiversity conservation, assisted migration, ecological restoration and rewilding +• Analysis and critique of the biodiversity concept in environmental philosophy and promising alternative concepts +We are open to presentations from different philosophical positions and traditions. +We organise two sessions during the conference, and presentations will be grouped by their content with one session dedicated to more abstract deliberations in terms of conceptual analysis, value-theory, biodiversity as a philosophical problem etc. and a second session being primarily dedicated to application/policy-orientated normative questions. Especially welcome are abstracts that focus on a philosophical analysis of science, ethics, and policy. The WBF conference attracts an interdisciplinary academic audience that is interested in different aspects of biodiversity conservation. Therefore, we emphasize that presentations should address an interdisciplinary audience. Interested presenters will also have the opportunity to share their presentations in form of draft papers with the other thematic session participants before the conference to allow for further in-depth exchange (optional pre-read papers). +Conveners +Markku Oksanen, Department of Social Sciences, University of Eastern Finland, P.O.Box 1627, 70211 Kuopio, Finland, markku.oksanen@uef.fi +Anna Deplazes Zemp, Department of Molecular Life Sciences, University of Zurich, anna.deplazeszemp@uzh.ch + + +### 252 CONSERVING BIODIVERSITY THROUGH EATING: IS THERE A CASE FOR VEGANISM? +Oral Presenter: Markku Oksanen (Kuopio, Finland) +09:30 – 09:45 +15 min + +https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lepomis_gibbosus + +### 371 SHOULD NON-HUMAN ORGANISMS HAVE A RIGHT TO A LIVABLE LOCALITY? +Oral Presenter: Simona Capisani (Durham, United Kingdom) +09:45 – 10:00 +15 min + + +### 373 THREE DIMENSIONS OF URGENCY +Oral Presenter: Yasha Rohwer (Wilsonville, United States) +Oral Presenter: Evelyn Brister (Rochester, United States) +10:00 – 10:15 +15 min + +3 dimensions of the concept of Urgency. +Rarely well defined + +### 408 SUSTAINABILITY AND HABITAT RIGHTS +Oral Presenter: Anna Wienhues (Oslo, Norway) +10:15 – 10:30 +15 min + + +### 777 WHY BIODIVERSITY ETHICS? +Oral Presenter: Gesine Schepers (Bielefeld, Germany) + + +Plenary Lecture +Plenary hall +Thursday, June 20, 08:00 – 09:30 +Ple_Thu_1 Plenary Thursday morning +The diversity of life is constantly evolving and changing - forming the Tree of Life. The Tree of Life can be regarded as a unifying framework that can inform biodiversity conservation. Successful conservation of biodiversity also requires to recognise nature as a stakeholder. Our task is to recognise the needs of fellow species and to listening to nature to redress and correct past mistakes, and to move to a future where nature is restored to its rightful place. + +Speakers: +Jesús Pinto-Ledezma +Evolutionary and quantitative ecologist, Department of Ecology, Evolution & Behavior at the University of Minnesota, United States, jpintole@umn.edu + +Wynter Jamieson Worsthorne +Intuitive Interspecies Communicator, founder Animaltalk Africa, wynter@animaltalkafrica.co.za +830 THE TREE OF LIFE AS A FOUNDATION FOR BASIC AND APPLIED RESEARCH +Oral Presenter: Jesús Pinto-Ledezma (St. Paul, United States) +08:00 – 08:45 +45 min +835 CONSULTING AND CO-CREATING WITH MOTHER NATURE FOR POSITIVE TRANSFORMATION +Oral Presenter: Wynter J. Worsthorne (Sunvalley, South Africa) + + + + +Parallel Session (oral) +Wisshorn +Thursday, June 20, 09:30 – 11:00 +HWBSDG_6.11 The Earth Metabolome Initiative +Life is a complex, dynamic and yet precise interplay of chemical structures and their reactions, orchestrated across dimensions and scales – from the forming and breaking of chemical bonds to the cycling of carbon and nutrients through ecosystems, and from the diversification of molecules to the diversification of all species on Earth. These processes and their participants – metabolites – govern relationships of living beings to each other and the Earth system. Humans depend on the metabolites of other organisms for nutrition and medicines. Yet we have identified only a minute fraction (~0.02%) of the millions of metabolites estimated to be produced across the Tree of Life. This fundamental aspect of biodiversity is a treasure chest yet to be unlocked, and with every species lost it is sinking out of reach. +By describing the ensemble of metabolites – the metabolome – of every organism, the Earth Metabolome Initiative (EMI) aims to reveal the mechanisms that orchestrate and maintain living systems. This information will be digitized and organized in an open knowledge base and accompanied by a metabolome biobank. An ongoing pilot project, the Digital Botanical Gardens Initiative (DBGI), is now developing open science workflows for digitization of chemodiversity from botanical collections. We expect the EMI to identify new ways to conserve, use and manage chemodiversity sustainably, thus directly contributing to the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. +This open session aims to bring together and align EMI members with researchers, prac­ti­tion­ers and so­ci­etal ac­tors. Presentations will focus on the challenge posed by the EMI: to catalog, contextualize, interpret, and make open Earth’s chemodiversity. In doing so, we will evaluate how the EMI can advance life sciences, benefit society, and protect biodiversity – as well as invite participants to discuss and contribute to the future of the Earth Metabolome Initiative as it evolves. +Conveners +Pierre-Marie Allard, COMMONS Lab, Department of Biology, University of Fribourg, Chemin du Musée, 10 – CH1700 Fribourg, Switzerland, pierre-marie.allard@unifr.ch +Emmanuel Defossez, Functional Ecology Laboratory, Institute of Biology, University of Neuchâtel, emmanuel.defossez@unine.ch +Meredith C. Schuman, Spatial Genetics, Departments of Geography and Chemistry, University of Zurich, meredithchristine.schuman@uzh.ch +The Earth Metabolome Initiative, an introduction. +Oral Presenter: Pierre-Marie Allard (Fribourg, Switzerland) +09:30 – 09:45 +15 min + +814 THE EARTH BIOGENOME PROJECT: PROGRESS ON BIOLOGY’S MOONSHOT +Oral Presenter: Harris Lewin (Tempe, United States) +09:45 – 10:15 + + +inititate with Genome10K + +2015-2017 strat of the EBP +Sequencing the genome of all eukaryotik life 1.8 M species over 10 years. +Launched at the Wellcome trust in London and WEF + +GOAT created at the Wlcomme Sanger for the EBP + + +EBP coordinating council +as for ambitions to set standards for the EBP and the related hubs + + +Standards recommendation for the Earth BioGenome Project + +> Develop standards EARLY in the project + + +EBP Committe Chairs + + +Governance structurebut NOT a legal entity + +Collection, identifying and storing of the organisms is the bottelneck. + + + + + +30 min +368 OCEAN METABOLOMICS FOR MARINE CHEMICAL ECOLOGY AND DRUG DISCOVERY RESEARCH +Oral Presenter: Deniz Tasdemir (Kiel, Germany) +10:15 – 10:30 +15 min + + +Most equipped centre for marine sample collection. +They operate worldwide +Ecometabolomics + + +514 GENOMIC DATA PRODUCTION SYSTEMS TO CATALOGUE AND EXPLORE EUKARYOTIC BIODIVERSITY +Oral Presenter: Robert Waterhouse (Lausanne, Switzerland) +10:30 – 10:45 +15 min + + +Note EMI: we need to show % of IUCN + + +587 MOLECULAR FEATURES OF PUSH-PULL INTERCROPPING SYSTEMS IN EAST AFRICA +Oral Presenter: Jakob Lang (Zurich, Switzerland) + + + +European Cell Atlas + +Select a couple of pilots ++ open ended project + +Moore project + +Have + +https://www.wythamwoods.ox.ac.uk/home +Withem woods longest running observed area in Cambridge + +Phylogenomic + google earth strategy + + +Beenome project +Gin robinson + +USDA + +Coordinated biobank + +GGBN - Global Genome Biodiversity Network + + +NSF NEON - National Ecological Observatory Network + +https://www.neonscience.org/ + +Bioblitz + + +JGI Nidro Mancy +https://genome.jgi.doe.gov/portal/ + + +Nico Franz AZU +Symbiota software for biodiversity data + +Biodiversity Cell Atlas + + + +European Biodiversity + +EBI biodivrsity Portal + + +Swiss Biobanking + + + + + + + + + + +https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=es&user=iCRGRz0AAAAJ&view_op=list_works