As mentioned in a previous scifoo post, I met Brad Zlotnick, Dan Janzen, and Winnie Hallwachs before even getting on the bus to head to Google. As it turns out, they are involved in a DNA-bar coding effort that is being applied to Dan and Winnie's field research in Costa Rica as part of a global effort to identify unique DNA signatures of all of the world's species. Another person involved in this effort (its big..) that I had several good conversations with was Vince Smith, a 'cybertaxonomist' at London’s Natural History Museum. These conversations about biodiversity, taxonomy, tagging, and semantic web-based knowledge representation really excited me because it felt like I might be able to make a real contribution to their efforts. Who knows, maybe biodiversity research will have an important part in the next phase of my working life - which would be great because it might mean I get additional offers to occasionally go on sample collection trips ;).
The biodiversity folks were also exciting because they are actually in the process of constructing a portable organism identification system (built to detect the DNA bar codes) that sounds like it will actually become a reality in the not-too-distant future. I've wanted one for backpacking trips for many years, but everyone always said it was impossible. Guess not :). I think the only time I wrote about this was just last year though its something I've annoyed nearly anyone I've ever taken a walk in the woods with.
Showing posts with label biodiversity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biodiversity. Show all posts
Monday, August 18, 2008
biodiversity researchers at scifoo
Posted by Benjamin Good at 4:34 PM 0 comments
Labels: biodiversity, DNA barcoding, scifoo, scifoo2008, taxonomy
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