Abstract:
A tropical country’s wildlands and their biodiversity can be major engines for
national development through high-quality sustainable use of these wildlands by society,
which is in turn the key to the implementation of the Biodiversity Convention.
Taxonomy is basic, universal and indispensable technological infrastructure for this use.
However, there are major taxonomic roadblocks throughout tropical biodiversity research
and development. No matter what the form of sustainable use and development of a
conserved wildland, a stable, accurate and phylogentically correct international taxonomy
of the millions of species of organisms involved is essential, and will greatly improve the
quality of the R & D. What we taxonomically know already is adequate to demonstrate
that we cannot develop biodiversity without much more taxonomic understanding. What
we know already also tantalizes us with the promise of what we could do if taxonomy
were no longer a roadblock. Today we can sample the chemicals or the genes in the few
hundred insect species that can be readily identified in a Costa Rican rainforest, but
imagine what we could do if we could easily identify the 200,000 species that are
neighbors to these few.
Ironically, the taxonomic roadblocks do not need to be there. They could largely be
eliminated in about three decades on a reasonable budget of $2-3 billion/year for the
entire enterprise for the entire world. This taxonomic organization (and much of the
world’s biodiversity inventory) can be done with the technology, administrative skills and
human resources at hand or that can be generated through processes of training and
planning already known and tried in society at large. And if this elimination of
roadblocks is not performed, virtually all of our plans and efforts in sustainable tropical
biodiversity R & D are going to yield woefully incomplete and confusing results.
The global and national taxonomic edifice is constructed of Conservation Areas, the
user community, libraries and mental deposits of information, question-specific
biodiversity research and development projects, the taxasphere - a community of
international taxonomists, synoptic collections in the taxasphere, an emerging network of
INBio-like processes, an emerging network of “All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory”
projects, and an Internet-like process and full computerization of the processes occurring
in these nine elements.
These elements work together to discover new biodiversity information and move it
out into society both electronically and through hard copy. Simultaneously, they collate
and repackage old and new information into new products and formats as new uses and
users are discovered.
However, for this to occur the taxonomic community requires not only a substantial
investment of financial resources and global political support, but also needs to reassess
its protocols for allocating its time and human resources so that they become more
sensitive to policy- and user-driven needs for taxonomic research and services.