W. Appeltans
Flanders Marine Institute
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by W. Appeltans.
Global Change Biology | 2018
Patricia Miloslavich; Nicholas J. Bax; Samantha E. Simmons; Eduardo Klein; W. Appeltans; Octavio Aburto-Oropeza; Melissa Andersen Garcia; Sonia D. Batten; Lisandro Benedetti-Cecchi; David M. Checkley; Sanae Chiba; J. Emmett Duffy; Daniel C. Dunn; Albert Fischer; John Gunn; Raphael M. Kudela; Francis Marsac; Frank E. Muller-Karger; David Obura; Yunne‐Jai Shin
Sustained observations of marine biodiversity and ecosystems focused on specific conservation and management problems are needed around the world to effectively mitigate or manage changes resulting from anthropogenic pressures. These observations, while complex and expensive, are required by the international scientific, governance and policy communities to provide baselines against which the effects of human pressures and climate change may be measured and reported, and resources allocated to implement solutions. To identify biological and ecological essential ocean variables (EOVs) for implementation within a global ocean observing system that is relevant for science, informs society, and technologically feasible, we used a driver-pressure-state-impact-response (DPSIR) model. We (1) examined relevant international agreements to identify societal drivers and pressures on marine resources and ecosystems, (2) evaluated the temporal and spatial scales of variables measured by 100+ observing programs, and (3) analysed the impact and scalability of these variables and how they contribute to address societal and scientific issues. EOVs were related to the status of ecosystem components (phytoplankton and zooplankton biomass and diversity, and abundance and distribution of fish, marine turtles, birds and mammals), and to the extent and health of ecosystems (cover and composition of hard coral, seagrass, mangrove and macroalgal canopy). Benthic invertebrate abundance and distribution and microbe diversity and biomass were identified as emerging EOVs to be developed based on emerging requirements and new technologies. The temporal scale at which any shifts in biological systems will be detected will vary across the EOVs, the properties being monitored and the length of the existing time-series. Global implementation to deliver useful products will require collaboration of the scientific and policy sectors and a significant commitment to improve human and infrastructure capacity across the globe, including the development of new, more automated observing technologies, and encouraging the application of international standards and best practices.
Biodiversity Data Journal | 2017
Daphnis De Pooter; W. Appeltans; Nicolas Bailly; Sky Bristol; Klaas Deneudt; Menashè Eliezer; Ei Fujioka; Alessandra Giorgetti; Philip Goldstein; Mirtha Lewis; Marina Lipizer; Kevin Mackay; María Rosa Marín; Gwenaelle Moncoiffe; Stamatina Nikolopoulou; Pieter Provoost; Shannon Rauch; Andres Roubicek; Carlos Torres; Anton Van de Putte; Leen Vandepitte; B. Vanhoorne; Matteo Vinci; Nina Wambiji; David Watts; Eduardo Klein Salas; Francisco Hernandez
The Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS) is the world’s most comprehensive online, open-access database of marine species distributions. OBIS grows with millions of new species observations every year. Contributions come from a network of hundreds of institutions, projects and individuals with common goals: to build a scientific knowledge base that is open to the public for scientific discovery and exploration and to detect trends and changes that inform society as essential elements in conservation management and sustainable development. Until now, OBIS has focused solely on the collection of biogeographic data (the presence of marine species in space and time) and operated with optimized data flows, quality control procedures and data standards specifically targeted to these data. Based on requirements from the growing OBIS community to manage datasets that combine biological, physical and chemical measurements, the OBIS-ENV-DATA pilot project was launched to develop a proposed standard and guidelines to make sure these combined datasets can stay together and are not, as is often the case, split and sent to different repositories. The proposal in this paper allows for the management of sampling methodology, animal tracking and telemetry data, biological measurements (e.g., body length, percent live cover, ...) as well as environmental measurements such as nutrient concentrations, sediment characteristics or other abiotic parameters measured during sampling to characterize the environment from which biogeographic data was collected. The recommended practice builds on the Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A) standard and on practices adopted by the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF). It consists of a DwC Event Core in combination with a DwC Occurrence Extension and a proposed enhancement to the DwC MeasurementOrFact Extension. This new structure enables the linkage of measurements or facts quantitative and qualitative properties to both sampling events and species occurrences, and includes additional fields for property standardization. We also embrace the use of the new parentEventID DwC term, which enables the creation of a sampling event hierarchy. We believe that the adoption of this recommended practice as a new data standard for managing and sharing biological and associated environmental datasets by IODE and the wider international scientific community would be key to improving the effectiveness of the knowledge base, and will enhance integration and management of critical data needed to understand ecological and biological processes in the ocean, and on land.
Archive | 2017
Mark J. Costello; Zeenatul Basher; Laura McLeod; Irawan Asaad; S. Claus; Leen Vandepitte; Moriaki Yasuhara; Henrik Gislason; Martin Edwards; W. Appeltans; Henrik Enevoldsen; Graham J. Edgar; Patricia Miloslavich; Silvia De Monte; Isabel Sousa Pinto; David Obura; Amanda E. Bates
Recognition of the threats to biodiversity and its importance to society has led to calls for globally coordinated sampling of trends in marine ecosystems. As a step to defining such efforts, we review current methods of collecting and managing marine biodiversity data. A fundamental component of marine biodiversity is knowing what, where, and when species are present. However, monitoring methods are invariably biased in what taxa, ecological guilds, and body sizes they collect. In addition, the data need to be placed, and/or mapped, into an environmental context. Thus a suite of methods will be needed to encompass representative components of biodiversity in an ecosystem. Some sampling methods can damage habitat and kill species, including unnecessary bycatch. Less destructive alternatives are preferable, especially in conservation areas, such as photography, hydrophones, tagging, acoustics, artificial substrata, light-traps, hook and line, and live-traps. Here we highlight examples of operational international sampling programmes and data management infrastructures, notably the Continuous Plankton Recorder, Reef Life Survey, and detection of Harmful Algal Blooms and MarineGEO. Data management infrastructures include the World Register of Marine Species for species nomenclature and attributes, the Ocean Biogeographic Information System for distribution data, Marine Regions for maps, and Global Marine Environmental Datasets for global environmental data. Existing national sampling programmes, such as fishery trawl surveys and intertidal surveys, may provide a global perspective if their data can be integrated to provide useful information. Less utilised and emerging sampling methods, such as artificial substrata, light-traps, microfossils and eDNA also hold promise for sampling the less studied components of biodiversity. All of these initiatives need to develop international standards and protocols, and long-term plans for their governance and support.
Frontiers in Marine Science | 2018
Frank E. Muller-Karger; Patricia Miloslavich; Nicholas J. Bax; Samantha E. Simmons; Mark J. Costello; Isabel Sousa Pinto; Gabrielle Canonico; Woody Turner; Michael J. Gill; Enrique Montes; Benjamin D. Best; Jay Pearlman; Patrick N. Halpin; Daniel C. Dunn; Abigail L. Benson; Corinne S. Martin; Lauren Weatherdon; W. Appeltans; Pieter Provoost; Eduardo Klein; Christopher R. Kelble; Robert J. Miller; Francisco P. Chavez; Katrin Iken; Sanae Chiba; David Obura; Laetitia M. Navarro; Henrique M. Pereira; Valerie Allain; Sonia D. Batten
Measurements of the status and trends of key indicators for the ocean and marine life are required to inform policy and management in the context of growing human uses of marine resources, coastal development, and climate change. Two synergistic efforts identify specific priority variables for monitoring: Essential Ocean Variables (EOVs) through the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS), and Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBVs) from the Group on Earth Observations Biodiversity Observation Network (GEO BON) (see Data Sheet 1 in Supplementary Materials for a glossary of acronyms). Both systems support reporting against internationally agreed conventions and treaties. GOOS, established under the auspices of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC), plays a leading role in coordinating global monitoring of the ocean and in the definition of EOVs. GEO BON is a global biodiversity observation network that coordinates observations to enhance management of the worlds biodiversity and promote both the awareness and accounting of ecosystem services. Convergence and agreement between these two efforts are required to streamline existing and new marine observation programs to advance scientific knowledge effectively and to support the sustainable use and management of ocean spaces and resources. In this context, the Marine Biodiversity Observation Network (MBON), a thematic component of GEO BON, is collaborating with GOOS, the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS), and the Integrated Marine Biosphere Research (IMBeR) project to ensure that EBVs and EOVs are complementary, representing alternative uses of a common set of scientific measurements. This work is informed by the Joint Technical Commission for Oceanography and Marine Meteorology (JCOMM), an intergovernmental body of technical experts that helps international coordination on best practices for observing, data management and services, combined with capacity development expertise. Characterizing biodiversity and understanding its drivers will require incorporation of observations from traditional and molecular taxonomy, animal tagging and tracking efforts, ocean biogeochemistry, and ocean observatory initiatives including the deep ocean and seafloor. The partnership between large-scale ocean observing and product distribution initiatives (MBON, OBIS, JCOMM, and GOOS) is an expedited, effective way to support international policy-level assessments (e.g., the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services or IPBES), along with the implementation of international development goals (e.g., the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals).
PLOS ONE | 2013
Mark J. Costello; Philippe Bouchet; Geoff A. Boxshall; Kristian Fauchald; Dennis P. Gordon; Bert W. Hoeksema; Gary C. B. Poore; Rob W.M. Van Soest; Sabine Stöhr; T. Chad Walter; B. Vanhoorne; Wim Decock; W. Appeltans
Biological Conservation | 2014
Mark J. Costello; W. Appeltans; Nicolas Bailly; Walter G. Berendsohn; Yde de Jong; Martin Edwards; Rainer Froese; Falk Huettmann; Wouter Los; Jan Mees; Hendrik Segers; Frank A. Bisby
Heip, C., Hummel, H., van Avesaath, P., Appeltans, W., Arvanitidis, C., Aspden, R., Austenfeld, Marcel, Boero, F., Bouma, T.J., Boxshall, G., Buchholz, F., Crowe, T., Delaney, A., Deprez, T., Emblow, C., Feral, J.P., Gasol, J.M., Gooday, A., Harder, J., Ianora, A., Kraberg, A., Mackenzie, B., Ojaveer, H., Paterson, D., Rumohr, Heye, Schiedek, D., Sokolowski, A., Somerfield, P., Sousa Pinto, I., Vincx, M., Węsławski, J.M. and Nash, R. (2009) Marine Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning MarBEF, Dublin, Ireland. | 2009
C.H.R. Heip; H. Hummel; P. van Avesaath; W. Appeltans; Christos Arvanitidis; Rebecca J. Aspden; Marcel Austenfeld; Ferdinando Boero; T.J. Bouma; Geoffrey A. Boxshall; F. Buchholz; Tasman P. Crowe; Alyne Delaney; T. Deprez; Chris S. Emblow; Jp. Feral; J.M. Gasol; Andrew J. Gooday; J. Harder; A. Ianora; A. Kraberg; B. Mackenzie; Henn Ojaveer; David M. Paterson; Heye Rumohr; D. Schiedek; A. Sokolowski; Paul J. Somerfield; I. Sousa Pinto; Magda Vincx
Conservation Biology | 2015
Mark J. Costello; B. Vanhoorne; W. Appeltans
Archive | 2006
S. Degraer; J. Wittoeck; W. Appeltans; K. Cooreman; T. Deprez; H. Hillewaert; Kris Hostens; Jan Mees; W Vandne Berghe; Magda Vincx
Plant Ecology and Evolution | 2010
S. Massó i Alemán; Carine Bourgeois; W. Appeltans; B. Vanhoorne; N. De Hauwere; P. Stoffelen; A. Heughebaert; Farid Dahdouh-Guebas