Elvis meets invasive species on the semantic web
Tim Finin, 10:21am 31 October 2005Our ELVIS poster presented by Joel Sachs and Cyndy Parr at the NBII All-Nodes Meeting was given an award for the poster generating the most interest. That’s “generating interest” as in “most interesting content” and not weirdest or most controversial. The poster describes a suite of tools being build as part of the NSF and USGS sponsored SPIRE project that is exploring how semantic web technologies can be used by ecological biologists.
The ELVIS (the Ecosystem Location Visualization and Information System) tool suite is motivated by the belief that food web structure plays a role in the success or failure of potential species invasions. Because very few ecosystems have been the subject of empirical foodweb studies, response teams are typically unable to get quick answers to questions like “what are likely prey and predator species of the invader in the new environment?” The focus of ELVIS is on providing evidence, as opposed to giving definitive answers to queries.
Categories: Semantic Web, , Related posts: • Semantic Eco-blogging: Spotter 1.0 Released; • The Semantic Naturalist: Ecoinformatics meets Semantic Web; • Spire: Semantic Web for Ecoinformatics; Trackback: link, Comments:

