angoraiode50logo_150_1IODE 50th anniversary international conference
Liège, Belgium, 21-22 March 2011

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By: Angora Aman, Philip Woodworth and Charles Magori

In recent years, there has been increasing concern about the projected rise in the level of the sea surface, due to the global climate change. Analysis of sea level rise is based on tide gauge data taken since the 19th century, as well as historical land records, archaeological data, geological evidence from the Holocene period, and more recently, altimeter data. Continuous sea level records from Africa are very short (generally less than 20 years). Our study provides a review of the Africa dataset, which is limited not only in size, especially given the great length of the coastline, but also in quality. This review is undertaken primarily from Permanent Service for Mean Sea Level (PSMSL) and Global Sea Observing System (GLOSS) perspectives, but the conclusions show that there is a need for major new investments in sea level infrastructure. In 2003, the Government of Flanders (Belgium) and Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC) through the programme Ocean Data and Information Network for Africa (ODINAfrica) installed 10 new sea level stations along African coasts. ODINAfrica in collaboration with GLOSS, the Indian Ocean Tsunami Early Warming and Mitigation System, and the Flemish Marine Institute have developed the Tsunami Sea Level Data Facility (www.sealevelstation.net). The new and historical data in combination provide information on the rates of sea level rise along the Gulf of Guinea not well represented in scientific studies to date. The rates were found to be similar to those observed at many other locations around the world.

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Latest News

26 march 2024: vacancy consultant OTGA 2 Project Manager

The IODE Programme Component, OceanTeacher Global Academy is seeking a consultant for 8 months

Please find the requirements here

This contract would run from 15 April until 15 December 2024.

Deadline to apply is 31st March 2024  Extended till 7 April 2024- contact point: Mr Peter Pissierssens (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.) and This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

19 March 2023: OBIS secretariat now has two experts in eDNA

OBIS has a key role in several new projects that use eDNA or aim to further improve this technology for biological monitoring and we are glad to announce that we now have two knowledgeable staff members in our OBIS secretariat who are experts in eDNA: Dr Emilie Boulanger (consultant) and Dr Saara Suominen (project appointment).

 

Dr Saara Sumominen, after more than 3 years working as a consultant for us with projects like PacMAN and eDNA expeditions, now joined the OBIS secretariat on a project appointment contract basis to help implement 3 Horizon Europe projects (Marco-Bolo, eDNAquaPlan and DTO-BioFlow), coordinate the final scientific report of eDNA expeditions in UNESCO marine world heritage sites, and further develop the capacity to manage eDNA projects at OBIS.

Saara can be reached by email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

More information on Saara's background see: https://obis.org/2020/09/15/saara/

  

Dr Emilie Boulanger joined us as a consultant and will support us with implementing two Horizon Europe projects: Marco-Bolo and eDNAquaPlan. Some of these tasks include (i) reviewing protocols and SOPs utilized for eDNA monitoring, (ii) testing bioinformatic workflows and comparing outputs across marker and taxonomic types, (iii) establish standards for genetic reference libraries and eDNA data repositories, (iv) aligning databases for enhanced interoperability, and (v) addressing the infrastructure and services for aquatic biodiversity monitoring using eDNA.  

Emilie has a background in biodiversity conservation and marine molecular ecology. For her PhD at the University of Montpellier, her work focused on applying molecular methods to study the genetic and species diversity of fish populations and communities in the Mediterranean Sea. During her following PostDoc experience at the Aix-Marseille University, she applied her research experience towards teaching as well as developing monitoring projects coupling environmental DNA metabarcoding with direct species observations. She is passionate about the ocean, knowledge dissemination and projects that bridge scientific innovation with environmental conservation and policy.

Emilie can be reached by email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

20/4/2024: Former IODE Chair Dr J.R. (Ron) Wilson passed away

We received the news that Dr J.R. Wilson (Ron) has passed away.

Dr J.R. Wilson was Director of the Marine Environmental Data Service of the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans. He was IODE Chair between 1992 and 1996 and chaired the 15th Session of the IODE Committee held in Athens, Greece. Dr Wilson was also GTSPP Project Leader and MEDS hosted the RNODC for drifting buoy data. Many of us remember Ron as a kind and very experienced colleague, always ready to advise and assist. 

We offer our condolences to Ron's family.

(picture of the IODE-XV Session with Ron behind the Chairman IODE sign) 

22 February 2024: Meeting of the IODE Management Group

The IODE management group meeting took place in Oostende, Belgium from 5-7 February 2024. The Summary Report is now available : https://oceanexpert.org/document/33860

background documents and presentations are available on https://oceanexpert.org/event/3991#overview

The following items were discussed during this 2.5 days meeting: the action points of the XVII meeting, the status of the IODE network , the restructuring of the IODE elements , the IODE Quality Management Framework, the different Programme elements achievements in the past year , the collaboration with other entities, IODE role in the UN Decade and new possible initiatives to come.

 

09 February 2024: Individual consultant ‘Stakeholder Engagement and Community Integration’ for the Marco Bolo project

OBIS is taking part in an EU-funded project, MARCO-BOLO (MARine COastal BiOdiversity Long-term Observations) which aims to structure and strengthen European coastal and marine biodiversity observation capabilities.

The main objective is to enable a digital framework for coastal and marine biodiversity data streams and data access. This will be done by building on international standards and approaches to establish the biological component of the marine
and coastal Earth observation Infrastructure in Europe. One of Marco-Bolo’s main aims is a more effective knowledge transfer and uptake of data and information products through the establishment of a stakeholder community and close engagement through co-design/co-creation workshops.

UNESCO-IOC is seeking an individual consultant to assist with the coordination of the Marco- Bolo project and more specifically the work related to Work Package 6 “Stakeholder Engagement and Community Integration”.

more information: HERE

Deadline to apply: 23 February 2024 (23: 59 CET)

contract start: 7 March 2024 - 75 % 

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