1. Report to NERC : InformaTec Soils : report for the InformaTec-Soils meeting at Defra, Nobel House, March 14th 2011
- Author
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Robinson, David A., Allton, Kathryn, Bhogal, Anne, Black, Helaina I.J., Costigan, Peter, Ellis, Mike, Emmett, Bridget A., Frogbrook, Zoë, Gardner, Murray, Giles, Jeremy, Glendining, Margaret, Hallett, Steve, Higgins, Alex, Hill, Claire, Hill, Nathan, Jones, Arwyn, Jordan, Crawford, Kingdon, Andrew, Kirk, Guy, Lawley, Russell, Skates, James, Rees, Gwyn, Vanguelova, Elena, Towers, Willie, Robinson, David A., Allton, Kathryn, Bhogal, Anne, Black, Helaina I.J., Costigan, Peter, Ellis, Mike, Emmett, Bridget A., Frogbrook, Zoë, Gardner, Murray, Giles, Jeremy, Glendining, Margaret, Hallett, Steve, Higgins, Alex, Hill, Claire, Hill, Nathan, Jones, Arwyn, Jordan, Crawford, Kingdon, Andrew, Kirk, Guy, Lawley, Russell, Skates, James, Rees, Gwyn, Vanguelova, Elena, and Towers, Willie
- Abstract
InformaTec is a 2-year, NERC-funded project that seeks to identify how to manage the increasing wealth of environmental data and information so that it can be transmitted, distributed, stored, archived, analysed and visualised, and in so doing, aims to recognise and develop opportunities for knowledge and technology transfer, both nationally and internationally. As such, InformaTec addresses a major objective of the NERC science strategy, namely, the “exploitation of technological advances to develop improved methods of monitoring environmental change.” InformaTec-Soils is one component of InformaTec; other aspects of the project focus on environmental monitoring, data standards, interoperability, and distributed computing. The specific aim of InformaTec-Soils is to draw together key players having interest in the collection and synthesis of large-scale soil data sets with a view to identifying what needs to be done to improve understanding of soil and environmental change. As part of the InformaTec-Soils initiative, a meeting of 24 experts from across the UK was convened at Defra, in London, on 14 March 2011. Through presentations, roundtable discussions and breakout groups, the meeting explored, current informatics, methodological and cultural challenges, and constraints, to the synthesis of UK and European soils data for understanding soil and environmental change. This report presents a vision for an ecosystems approach to soils and summarizes the conclusions and recommendations of the meeting held in London. As well as identifying opportunities for the soils community generally, the report will be presented to NERC to inform decisions on future funding. The authors of the report extend their gratitude to all who contributed to the meeting and the production of this report. The report identifies the following important research topics for soils: Key areas for research: 1) Framework development. 2) Quantifying the soil resource, stocks, fluxes, transformations an
- Published
- 2011