FISHGLOB: A collaborative infrastructure to bridge the gap between scientific monitoring and marine biodiversity conservation

Aurore A. Maureaud*, Zoë Kitchel, Alexa Fredston, Robert Guralnick, Juliano Palacios-Abrantes, Maria L. D. Palomares, Malin L. Pinsky, Nancy L. Shackell, James T. Thorson, Daniela Alemany, Kofi Amador, Rathnayaka Mudiyanselage Wajra Jeewantha Bandara, Jonathan Belmaker, Esther D. Beukhof, Steven J. Bograd, Mohamed Lamine Camara, Pierluigi Carbonara, Daniel van Denderen, Shahar Chaikin, Martin A. CollinsTyler D. Eddy, Dori Edelist, Heino O. Fock, Romain Frelat, Kevin D. Friedland, Arnaud Grüss, Manuel Hidalgo, Didier Jouffre, Saïkou Oumar Kidé, Mariano Koen-Alonso, Ian Knuckey, Stan Kotwicki, Edward Lavender, Martin Lindegren, Marcos Llope, Laura Mannocci, Julia G. Mason, Hicham Masski, Matthew McLean, Laurène Mérillet, Vesselina Mihneva, Francis K.E. Nunoo, Richard L. O'Driscoll, Cecilia A. O'Leary, Laurene Pecuchet, Elitsa Petrova, Jorge E. Ramos, Ignacio Sobrino, Jón Sólmundsson, Vaishav Soni, Ingrid Spies, Maria Teresa Spedicato, Fabrice Stephenson, Ndiaga Thiam, Feriha Tserkova, George Tserpes, Evangelos Tzanatos, Daniel van Denderen, Paraskevas Vasilakopoulos, Tom Webb, Daniela V. Yepsen, Philippe Ziegler, Walter Zupa, Bastien Mérigot

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Large-scale biodiversity assessments and conservation applications require integrated and up-to-date datasets across regions. In the oceans, monitoring is fragmented, which affects knowledge exchange and usage. Among existing monitoring programs, scientific bottom-trawl surveys (SBTS) are long-term, rich, and well-maintained data sources at the scale of each sampled region, but these data are under-utilized in biodiversity applications, especially across regions. This is hampered by the lack of an international community and database maintained through time. To address this, we created FISH-GLOB, an infrastructure gathering SBTS and experts. In 5 years, we developed an integrated database of SBTS and a consortium gathering more than 100 experts and users. Here, we are sharing the project history, achievements, challenges, and outlooks. In particular, we reflect on the infrastructure-building social and technical processes which will guide the development of similar infrastructures. The FISHGLOB project takes ocean monitoring one step forward in working as a unified community across disciplines and regions of the world
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70035
JournalConservation Science and Practice
Volume7
Issue number6
Number of pages12
ISSN2578-4854
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Biodiversity monitoring
  • Bottom trawl surveys
  • Community-building
  • Dataset integration
  • Global change
  • Knowledge transfer
  • Marine fish
  • Species conservation

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