Inventory of plant species produced in CERF nuseries

Occurrence
Latest version published by Centre d'Etudes de Recherches et de Formation Forestières (CERF) on May 8, 2019 Centre d'Etudes de Recherches et de Formation Forestières (CERF)

Download the latest version of this resource data as a Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A) or the resource metadata as EML or RTF:

Data as a DwC-A file download 24 records in English (7 KB) - Update frequency: unknown
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Metadata as an RTF file download in English (12 KB)

Description

List of plants species commonly produced at CERF-BENIN

Data Records

The data in this occurrence resource has been published as a Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A), which is a standardized format for sharing biodiversity data as a set of one or more data tables. The core data table contains 24 records.

This IPT archives the data and thus serves as the data repository. The data and resource metadata are available for download in the downloads section. The versions table lists other versions of the resource that have been made publicly available and allows tracking changes made to the resource over time.

Versions

The table below shows only published versions of the resource that are publicly accessible.

How to cite

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

GBAGUIDI R., AIKPON G., P. AKOTON, G. AKOUEHOU, KAKPO S. B., KOURA K., GANGLO J. C., 2019. Inventory of plant species produced in CERF nuseries. Centre d'Etudes, de Recherches et de Formations Forestières (CERF), Bénin.

Rights

Researchers should respect the following rights statement:

The publisher and rights holder of this work is Centre d'Etudes de Recherches et de Formation Forestières (CERF). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY 4.0) License.

GBIF Registration

This resource has been registered with GBIF, and assigned the following GBIF UUID: 710f3a9b-b0c8-4b40-9469-d7060071e23e.  Centre d'Etudes de Recherches et de Formation Forestières (CERF) publishes this resource, and is itself registered in GBIF as a data publisher endorsed by GBIF Benin.

Keywords

Occurrence; Inventory; plant species; CERF nuseries

Contacts

Gorgias AIKPON
  • Originator
  • Master 2 Student
Laboratoire des Sciences Forestières (LSF)
+229 Abomey-Calavi
Atlantique
BJ
  • 61450451
Pérugine AKOTON
  • Metadata Provider
  • Master 2 Student
Laboratoire des Sciences Forestières
  • Abomey-calavi
Atlantique
BJ
  • 66503957
Gaston AKOUEHOU
  • Metadata Provider
  • Director
Centre d'Etude et de Recherche Forestière
+229
BJ
  • 97367678
Sunday Berlioz KAKPO
  • Metadata Provider
  • Deputy Chief of Department Biodiversity Informatic and Climate Change
Laboratoire des Sciences Forestières
  • 04bp1005
04bp1005 Cotonou
Littoral
BJ
  • 97123391
Kourouma KOURA
  • Metadata Provider
  • Service Etude et Caractérisation des Produits Forestiers Autres que le Bois
Laboratoire des Sciences Forestières/Université d’Abomey-Calavi (LSF/UAC)
+229 Cotonou
Littoral
BJ
  • 96716130
Jean Cossi GANGLO
  • Metadata Provider
  • Directeur
Laboratoire des Sciences Forestières (LSF)
  • BP 1493 Calavi
+229 Abomey-Calavi
Atlantique
BJ
  • 66363770
Roméo GBAGUIDI
  • Point Of Contact
  • Chef Service Sylviculture et Agroforesterie
Centre d'Etude et de Recherche Forestière
+229 Abomey-Calavi
Atlantique
BJ
  • 95242460

Geographic Coverage

Benin (West Africa)

Bounding Coordinates South West [6.366, 2.464], North East [6.366, 2.464]

Temporal Coverage

Start Date 2018-05-09

Project Data

Through key objectives, this project is designed to overcome the challenge of lack of capacities in Africa: Objective 1: Build in-depth capacities in biodiversity informatics to students in masters program: At least 20 Beninese students and 10 students of other nationalities will be yearly recruited and fully capacitated in the program (Months 4, 16, 28 and beyond the project) (Output 1). The courses will be recorded and shared worldwide (Outcome 4). Objective 2: Build capacities in biodiversity informatics to other GBIF Benin partners (students and professionals): Through workshops, at least, each year, 50 other GBIF Benin partners will be trained in relevant topics of biodiversity informatics (Months 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 34 and beyond) (Output 5) Objective 3: Fill data gaps in priority thematic areas of Benin and other countries involved in the project: Trained students will achieve data gaps analysis in priority thematic areas (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Output 6) and contribute to fill data gaps (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Output 7). Objective 4: Use data to develop appropriate products to inform decisions on biodiversity conservation: Trained students will use data to address needs of information (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Output 8) and largely disseminate the results via multimedia (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Output 9). Project Objective 5: Enhance staff development: We will provide internship opportunities to strengthen capacities of national trainers and most brilliant students to enable them to sustainably carry on the training of students in the program

Title Regional graduate course for capacity development in biodiversity informatics in Africa
Identifier http://jrsbiodiversity.org/jrs-supports-capacity-development-uac-oxford-2018/; http://jrsbiodiversity.org/grants/uac-2018/
Funding The funding of this project is generously provided by JRS Biodiversity Foundation (http://jrsbiodiversity.org/)
Study Area Description Actually in Benin, we estimate that there are 400 – 600 working biodiversity information scientists in public and private agencies. With few exceptions, the situation is not much different in the rest of African countries. Those biodiversity information scientists usually base their decisions - of biodiversity conservation - on floristic and faunistic compositions of ecosystems and related communities as well as on ecology, ethology and habitat characteristics of different species. This approach becomes limiting to conserve efficiently and sustainably biodiversity in the actual threatening context of climate and global changes exacerbated by diverse pressures on biodiversity. To overcome that limitation, we rather need a critical mass of scientists with sound knowledge in biodiversity informatics to achieve relevant results on spatial distributions, ecological niches… of species and different biota to inform decisions on priority areas of biodiversity. In order to develop a trained cohort to meet national needs, we believe that Benin needs to train at least an additional 20 master students. Additionally, training each year at least 10 other masters and advanced students from different African countries, will result in progressive but efficient creation of homes of biodiversity informatics to enhance biodiversity conservation and sustainable uses throughout Africa.
Design Description The work plan of the project is presented per objective: Objective 1: Build in-depth capacities in biodiversity informatics to students in masters program We will recruit students every year (Activity 1) at least 20 Beninese students and 10 students of other nationalities (Months 4, 16, 28 and beyond) (Output 1).Students will be fully trained in relevant topics of biodiversity informatics by national and international experts (Months 1-36 and beyond) (Activity 2) so that, after two years of training, at least 80% of students successfully graduate (Months 18, 30 and beyond) (Output 2). The courses will be recorded and shared (Months 1-36) (Activity 3) to enable worldwide use and reuse (Outcome 3). Objective 2: Build capacities in biodiversity informatics to other GBIF Benin partners (students and professionals) Here, we will enhance, through one Professional Skills Workshop per year, capacity buildings to other GBIF Benin partners (Months 6, 18, 30and beyond) (Activity 4) by training yearly, at least 50 of them in relevant topics of biodiversity informatics (Output 4). Therefore, data gap analysis, data collection, and data uses will be promoted (Outcome 4). Objective 3: Whenever deemed relevant, identify and fill data gaps in priority thematic areas of Benin and other countries involved in the project Whenever relevant, trained students will achieve data gaps analysis (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Activity 5) in at least 3 priority thematic areas of their respective countries (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Output 5); they will then collect and publish data (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Activity 6) to fill the gaps identified (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Output 5). Therefore, data gap analysis, data collection, and data uses will be promoted (Outcome 4). Objective 4: Use data to develop appropriate products to inform decisions on biodiversity conservation To attain that objective, trained students will use data (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Activity 7) to address needs of information (species, biota spatial distributions and niche models…) to support biodiversity conservation (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Output 7). We will then, through Communication and Outreach Workshops (1 per year), achieve communication and outreach (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Activity 8) to largely disseminate the products developed, in government agencies, NGOs, universities, private sectors… (Months 12 – 36 and beyond) (Output 8). Therefore, detailed and data products developed will be promoted in decision making (Outcome 5). Objective 5: Enhance staff development Here, we will provide internship opportunities to national trainers and most brilliant students to strengthen their capacities so that they can reliably carry on the training of students (Months 1 – 36 and beyond) (Activity 9) to sustain in the program (Outcome 7)

The personnel involved in the project:

Jean Cossi GANGLO
  • Point Of Contact

Bibliographic Citations

  1. Akoègninou A., Van der Burg W.J., Van der Maesen L.J.G., Flore Analytique du Bénin. Herbier National du Bénin. 1034 pages; -Hutchinson J., Dalziel J.M., 1954. Flora of West Tropical Africa. Second édition, Vol. I. Part1; 295 pages; -Hutchinson J., Dalziel J.M., 1958. Flora of West Tropical Africa. Second édition, Vol. I. Part 2; 532 pages

Additional Metadata