U.S. Daily Highest Max Temperature Records set on June 28, 2012

Out of a possible 5,752 records: 205 (Broken) + 74 (Tied) = 279 Total
Just the facts, Ma’am.
Agrobiodiversity is crops, livestock, foodways, microbes, pollinators, wild relatives …
U.S. Daily Highest Max Temperature Records set on June 28, 2012

Out of a possible 5,752 records: 205 (Broken) + 74 (Tied) = 279 Total
Just the facts, Ma’am.
We’ve been asked to contribute an agricultural perspective to the Biodiversity Informatics Whitepaper, a document
…that is intended to inform funding organisations about the priorities as perceived by practitioners in the field.
You can find the document itself, and more background, here. Well worth a read, even if you decide not to comment.
…is off and running in Copenhagen
The Global Biodiversity Informatics Conference (GBIC) will convene expertise in the fields of biodiversity informatics, genomics, earth observation, natural history collections, biodiversity research and policy needed to set such collaboration in motion.
Follow it on Twitter. See the presentations.
allowing access to relevant environmental data and predict, anywhere on earth, on any res, at any time, as a service for anyone #gbic2012
— Donat Agosti (@myrmoteras) July 2, 2012
Report on it here, if you like.
LATER: Oh gosh, there’s also this today: 2nd LCIRAH Annual Workshop “The Role of Agricultural and Food Systems Research in Combating Chronic Disease for Development.” Here’s the hashtag.
Jawoo Koo has the lowdown on that decision to use the SPAM crop maps for the yield gap atlas rather than, as it turns out, MIRCA2000’s:
The workshop organizer distributed MIRCA’s crop distribution maps to each country expert and asked for feedback on whether the maps adequately represented where the crops are (or aren’t) in terms of harvested area. Reviewing all the feedback comments and comparing the results against the SPAM data, the organizers established that “… In nearly all cases, the SPAM maps were more consistent with the feedback we received from the GYGA agronomists at the workshop.”
There are caveats, though. Read the full story.