GGBN Conference 2023/Program

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Program

Download GGBN 2023 Program and Abstract Book

Most of the presentations are now available through the GGBN Document Library as open access docs, some are available in the library only. Links are provided below. Presentations with restricted access can be located on the Document Library under the Category “GGBN Conferences,” Subcategory “GGBN 2023 Conference". Please contact library@ggbn.org to request a library account.

Day 1 – 17.10.2023

08:00 - 09:00 Arrival, check in
09:05 - 09:35 Urgency and Ethics: A Dilemma for Biobanking and Biodiversity Discovery - Oliver Ryder, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance IUCN-SSC Animal Biobanking for Conservation Specialist Group

Session IA Biodiversity Biobank Collections: Infrastructure

Chairs - Gilberto Ocampo and Ana Lourdes Medrano
09:35 - 09:45 The Vertebrate Genetic Resources Facility at the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute - Andy Bentley, University of Kansas PDF
09:45 - 09:55 Biological Collection of Tissues/DNA Host-Parasite Relationship: Infrastructure, Researcher Training and Visibility Strategies - Angie González, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Sede Bogota PDF
09:55 - 10:05 Biodiversity Biobanking at the Natural History Museum London – a Big New Facility at Thames Valley Science Park, Reading, UK - Jackie Mackenzie-Dodds, National Museum of Natural History, London PDF
10:05 - 10:15 Living Collections of the GermoLab Botanical Garden (CICY) - Aleida R. Díaz Castellanos, Centro de Investigación Científica de Yucatán PDF

10:15 - 10:30 Morning Coffee Break

10:30 - 10:40 Managing Plant Repositories in Uganda amidst Limited Resources - Mutegeki Alislam Said Musa, Tooro Botanical Gardens PDF
10:40 - 10:50 UFS Yeast culture collection: Meeting the needs of researchers - Adepemi Ogundeji, University of the Free State, South Africa PDF
10:50 - 11:00 The New Fiocruz Biodiversity and Health Biobank - Manuela da Silva, Fiocruz, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation PDF
11:00 - 11:10 Conservation and sustainable use of plant genetic resources for food and agriculture: The South African Approach - Thabo Tjikana, Department of Agriculture Land Reform and Rural Development
11:10 - 11:20 Leibniz Institute DSMZ - German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures - Melania Muñoz García, Leibniz Institute
11:20 - 11:30 Keeping it chilled: A South African catalogue of Wildlife Biodiversity - Kim Labuschagne, National Zoological Gardens of South Africa PDF
11:30 - 11:40 LIB Biobank at Museum Koenig, Bonn, Germany - Jonas Astrin, Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change PDF

11:40 - 13:30 Lunch Break

Session IB Biodiversity Biobank Collections: Sample Management

Chairs - Gilberto Ocampo and Ana Lourdes Medrano
13:30 - 13:40 Rio de Janeiro Botanical Garden Tissue and DNA Collections’ Management using the JABOT system - Luciana Franco VIDEO
13:40 - 13:50 Establishment and conservation of an in vitro Germplasm Bank of plant species from the arid zones of México - Eugenio Perez Molphe Balch, Universidad Autónoma de Aguascalientes PDF
13:50 - 14:00 Unlocking collection treasures: Accessing museum samples for long read sequencing and genomic analysis - Bernhard Bein PDF
14:00 - 14:10 Sample management in the DNA Bank of the Universidad Autónoma de Aguascalientes, Mexico - Gilberto Ocampo, Universidad de Aguascalientes PDF
14:10 - 14:20 Establishing a Biobank at The Huntington - Brian Dorsey, The Huntington Botanical Gardens PDF
14:20 - 14:30 Agrobiodiversity Index, Challenges, Opportunities and Trends - Kakha Nadiradze, Farmers Rights Defense, National Gene Bank Association of Georgia
14:30 - 14:40 Skimming at scale: bringing historic collections into the genomic era - Andie Hall, Natural History Museum, London PDF
14:40 - 14:50 Collection of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants of the State University of Campinas - Ilio Montanari Jr., State University of Campinas PDF
14:50 - 15:00 Biomaterials Biobanking and BOLD Barcoding Benefits - Kim Labuschagne & Monica Mwale, South African National Biodiversity Institute PDF

15:00 - 15:20 Afternoon Coffee Break

Session II Environmental Samples and Data

Chairs - Karen James, Rachel Meyer, Jackie Mackenzie-Dodds, Jonas Astrin
15:20 - 15:30 Connecting environmental samples to a biodiversity information system to make data accessible - Beth Kaplin, Center of Excellence in Biodiversity and Natural Resource Management,University of Rwanda PDF
15:30 - 15:40 Towards inclusivity in molecular method standardization for biodiversity assessment - Kristian Meissner, Finnish Environment Institute, Syke PDF
15:40 - 15:50 National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Biorepository - Rebecca Pugh, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Chemical Sciences Division PDF
15:50 - 16:00 Environmental specimen banks in research and regulation for a better environmental quality - Jan Koschorreck, The German Environment Agency PDF
16:00 - 16:10 Taxonomic diversity and distribution patterns of microorganisms in the CBUDES Biological Collection: Biobank of microorganisms from northeastern Colombia - Natalia Bravo-Granados, Diversidad Taxonómica y Patrones de Distribución de Microorganismos en la Colección CBUDES VIDEO
16:10 - 16:20 Maine-eDNA: a case study for large-scale environmental sampling, metadata collection anddata management in one of the world’s fastest-warming ocean regions - Karen James, University of Maine PDF
16:20 - 16:30 Summary of our experience in application of remote techniques for environmental sample collection - Blagoy Uzunov, Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski,” Faculty of Biology, Departmentof Botany PDF
16:30 - 16:40 CALeDNA: Environmental collections to enable landscape biodiversity surveys and models ofcommunity change - Rachel Meyer, University of California CALeDNA Program VIDEO
16:40 - 16:50 Strengthening global-change science by integrating aeDNA with paleoecoinformatics - John Williams, University of Wisconsin Madison VIDEO
16:50 - 17:00 Diatoms, a model group for DNA Barcoding - Belen Escobari, Botanischer Garten undBotanisches Museum Berlin, Freie Universität Berlin PDF

Day 2 – 18.10.2023

Session III – Cell Banking and Culture Collections

Chairs - Oliver Ryder, Jonas Astrin and Jackie Mackenzie-Dodds
09:00 - 09:13 The UK Crop Microbiome Cryobank – Advancing Microbiome Research for Sustainable - Agriculture - Rodrigo Taketani, Rothamsted Research PDF
09:13 - 09:26 Strategy for the Biobanking of Potato Genetic Resources at the IPK Genebank - Manuela Nagel, Leibniz-Institut (IPK) VIDEO
09:26 - 09:39 South African National Collection of Fungi: An established resource on the continent - Riana Jacobs-Venter, National Collection of Fungi PDF VIDEO
09:39 - 09:52 The World Federation of Culture Collections and the Global Genome Biodiversity Network: Sharing the Same Mission for Sustainable Futures - Ipek Kurtböke, World Federation of Culture Collections VIDEO
09:52 - 10:05 Establishing model lineage systems to study inter-species advanced reproductive approaches - Francisco Pelegri, University of Wisconsin, Madison PDF
10:05 - 10:18 Important Considerations for Biobanking for Genetic Rescue of Endangered Species - Ben Novak, Revive and Restore PDF

10:18 - 10:33 Morning Coffee break

10:33 - 10:46 Introducing Nature’s SAFE: a European Biobank for Conservation - Tullis Matson, Nature's Safe PDF
10:46 - 10:59 Reproductive biotechnologies and Genetic Resource Banks Applied to Wildlife Conservation in Argentina - Adrián Sestelo, Gerencia Operativa de Conservación y Gestión de Fauna PDF
10:59 - 11:12 Projects at LIB Biobank Enabling Cell Banking and Protocol Collection - Jonas Astrin, Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change PDF
11:12 - 11:25 PCRYOZOO Biobank of Animal Cell Lines - Tomàs Marquès and Cira Martínez, Institut de Biologia Evolutiva PDF
11:25 - 11:38 Organoids for Biobanking and Cellular Agriculture - Julie Strand, Aarhus University PDF
11:38 - 11:51 Living algal collection of Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski” (ACUS)- Important Ex-Situ Biodiversity Conservation Facility, which Maintains High-quality Algal Strains - Need for Biobanking of Algae in Bulgaria – a Country on the Balkan Peninsula with Extra Rich Biodiversity - Maya Stoyneva and Kristian Ivanov, Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski” PDF PDF
11:51 - 12:04 Biobank of Megadiverse Fauna of Brazil - Maria José de Jesus Silva, Laboratório de Ecologia e Evolução

11:51 - 12:04 Lunch break

Session IV – Biobanking in megadiverse countries and the Southern Hemisphere

Chairs - Kim Labuschagne
13:30 - 13:45 Pangolins: Cultural Use, Illegal Trade and the Scientific Importance of Biobanking Specimens in South Africa - Ray Jansen, Zoological Society of London PDF
13:45 - 14:00 Biobanking in a Megadiverse Country: a Brief review of Brazilian Current Initiatives - Paulo Holanda, Bioquallis Consulting, Curitiba, Paraná PDF
14:00 - 14:15 Biodiversity Biobanks South Africa: A Distributed Network of Repositories for South Africa's Rich Biodiversity - Mudzuli Mavhunga, Biodiversity Biobanks South Africa
14:15 - 14:30 The importance of the Humboldt Institute Tissue Collection for Biodiversity Research and Conservation in a Megadiverse Country - Gustavo Bravo, Instituto Alexander von Humboldt
14:30 - 14:45 Infrastructure and Management of a Large-scale Genome Bank in a Megadiverse Developing Country. A Case Study in Ecuador - Diego Paucar, Museo de Zoología PDF
14:45 - 15:00 Using Biodiversity Biobanking to Enhance Plant Conservation in the Megadiverse Country South Africa - Ross Stewart, African Centre for DNA Barcoding VIDEO

15:00 - 15:30 Afternoon Coffee break

Workshop I: Policies for Molecular Collections, GGBN data standard, and workflows for publishing data

Chair - Astrid de Mestier
15:30 - 15:45 Management of Genetic Resources in Natural History Collections using Specify Collection Management Software - Andrew Bentley, University of Kansas PDF
15:45 - 16:00 Symbiota-based Services for Publishing Genomic Collections Data - Nico Franz, Arizona State University PDF
16:00 - 16:15 Policies for Molecular Collections - Astrid de Mestier, Botanical Garden and Botanical Museum PDF
16:15 - 16:30 GGBN Data Standard, and Workflows for Publishing data - Jörg Holetschek, Botanischer Garten Berlin VIDEO

Day 3 – 19.10.2023

Session V- The Nagoya Protocol in Practice: Does it Affect My Field Work and Associated Research?

Chair - Gilberto Ocampo
09:00 - 09:15 Welcome / Interactive introduction to the Nagoya Protocol - Gilberto Ocampo and Melania Muñoz García, Universidad Autónoma de Aguascalientes and Leibniz Institute DSMZ
09:15 - 09:30 Why is the Nagoya Protocol important for GGBN Collections and Biobanks? - Manuela da Silva, Fiocruz, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation PDF
09:30 - 09:45 The Nagoya Protocol in Mexico - Adelita San Vicente Tello, SEMARNAT
09:45 - 10:00 The Nagoya Protocol and the EU ABS Regulation from a Users’ Perspective - Janina Bornemann, University of Bremen PDF
10:00 - 10:15 Community protocols and ABS of genetic resources and traditional knowledge associated to genetic resources at the local level - Guadalupe Yesenia Hernández Márquez & Adriana Flores Díaz, International Indigenous Forum on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services IIFBES PDF

10:15 - 10:45 Morning Coffee break

10:45 - 11:00 The Nagoya Protocol: Where to start? Build your ABS Strategy - Melania Muñoz García, Leibniz Institute DSMZ
11:00 - 11:15 Digital Sequence Information and Open Biodata Resources - Chuck Cook, University of Cambridge PDF

11:15 - 11:25 Q&A Chair - Gilberto Ocampo

11:25 - 11:30 Closing Remarks - Manuela da Silva
11:30 - 12:00 Conference Group Picture

12:00 - 13:30 Lunch break

13:30 - 15:00 General Assembly Meeting and Conference Close
15:00 - 16:00 Workshop II: GGBN and the Future of Biodiversity Biobanking
16:00 - 17:00 Executive Committee Meeting

More Conference Information

GGBN Conference 2023