Difference between revisions of "Testimonials"
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*{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NFxTOJGCJmU|500||'''The Earth Biogenome Project and its relation to GGBN'''|frame}} | *{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NFxTOJGCJmU|500||'''The Earth Biogenome Project and its relation to GGBN'''|frame}} | ||
− | + | <gallery heights=300px widths=200px perrow=3 caption="click on the text below the thumbnails to get the pdf"> | |
− | + | Image:UGPR.png|''[https://news.uoguelph.ca/2018/05/u-gs-genetic-archive-now-open-world/ University of Guelph releases approximately 1.5 million DNA records on GGBN]'' | |
− | + | Image:NMNH_Testimonial.jpg|''[https://library.ggbn.org/share/s/4Q2Ll4SRR4aq_D9phadtUg National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution (NMNH) about GGBN]'' | |
+ | Image:IVB_Testimonial.jpg|''[https://library.ggbn.org/share/s/WW2S4TPOR7aNR6d5M1IBGw Institute of Vertebrate Biology (IVB) about GGBN]'' | ||
+ | Image:OGL_Testimonial.jpg|''[https://library.ggbn.org/share/s/RPHvPHCaSYa18oWD7rP-0Q Ocean Genome Legacy (OGL) about GGBN]'' | ||
+ | </gallery> | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Evgeny Zakharov, the CBG’s associate director of genomics, said making the domestic sample archive available through the new database “will increase the profile of Canadian science worldwide. It also puts Guelph on the global map.” | ||
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+ | *"It used to be much harder to access information about collections in museums, and we wanted to provide a digital platform to make these valuable species discoverable," says Austrian Institute of Technology researcher Eva Maria Sehr. The not-too-sustainable way of life has led to an exponential decline in biodiversity, which makes collecting even more difficult, says Sehr. "Many species are now protected and may no longer be collected, so if you want to use a species scientifically, you can go back to the GGBN database and not have to start all over again." |
Latest revision as of 16:03, 14 June 2018
- Evgeny Zakharov, the CBG’s associate director of genomics, said making the domestic sample archive available through the new database “will increase the profile of Canadian science worldwide. It also puts Guelph on the global map.”
- "It used to be much harder to access information about collections in museums, and we wanted to provide a digital platform to make these valuable species discoverable," says Austrian Institute of Technology researcher Eva Maria Sehr. The not-too-sustainable way of life has led to an exponential decline in biodiversity, which makes collecting even more difficult, says Sehr. "Many species are now protected and may no longer be collected, so if you want to use a species scientifically, you can go back to the GGBN database and not have to start all over again."