The Contribution of Digital Sequence Information to Conservation Biology: A Southern African Perspective

Author:

Russo Isa‐Rita M.1ORCID,de Jager Deon2ORCID,van Wyk Anna M.3,Klopper Arrie W.3,Uiseb Kenneth4,Birss Coral5,Rushworth Ian6,Bloomer Paulette3

Affiliation:

1. School of Biosciences Cardiff University Cardiff CF10 3AX UK

2. Section of Molecular Ecology and Evolution Globe Institute University of Copenhagen Copenhagen 1353 Denmark

3. Department of Biochemistry Genetics and Microbiology University of Pretoria Pretoria 0002 South Africa

4. Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism Windhoek 13306 Namibia

5. CapeNature Cape Town 7766 South Africa

6. Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife Pietermaritzburg 3201 South Africa

Abstract

AbstractMany recent contributions have made a compelling case that genetic diversity is not adequately reflected in international frameworks and policies, as well as in local governmental processes implementing such frameworks. Using digital sequence information (DSI) and other publicly available data is supported to assess genetic diversity, toward formulation of practical actions for long‐term conservation of biodiversity, with the particular goal of maintaining ecological and evolutionary processes. Given the inclusion of specific goals and targets regarding DSI in the latest draft of the Global Biodiversity Framework negotiated at the 15th Conference of the Parties (COP15) in Montreal in December 2022 and the crucial decisions on access and benefit sharing to DSI that will be taken in the coming months and future COP meetings, a southern African perspective on how and why open access to DSI is essential for the conservation of intraspecific biodiversity (genetic diversity and structure) across country borders is provided.

Funder

Global Challenges Research Fund

H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

Reference25 articles.

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