Golfer247 - The latest news and products from the world of golf
Main Menu | News By Date | News By Supplier | News By Category | About Us
 

NEW DATABASE TO MANAGE PESTS BETTER
29 April 2002 - CSIRO

CSIRO technology is at the heart of a new database that will enable researchers to better manage damaging exotic and local plant pests. CSIRO's Internet Marketplaces technology has been used to integrate a collection of plant pest records from databases across Australia, providing comprehensive query access to these records via the Internet.

The Australian Plant Pest Database is funded by Plant Health Australia and managed by the Office of the Chief Plant Protection Officer in the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Australia. It provides Australian plant health scientists access to specimen records including insects, nematodes, fungi, bacteria and viruses that attack plants of significance to Australian agriculture and biodiversity.

"Our Internet Marketplaces technology is a distributed database system that works as an information broker, allowing heterogeneous electronic collections from agencies across Australia to be accessed via a national web portal," says senior computer scientist at CSIRO, Dr Kerry Taylor. "It enables the viewer to access data from disparate sources, dynamically and seamlessly."

The IMP tool is a unique approach to information management and integration. It enables organisations to combine information assets, regardless of what format they are in and where they are held. The technology provides Internet or intranet access to dispersed heterogeneous information sources, with the data combined and viewed in a way to suit the viewer.

"We are developing the underlying theory and creating solutions for integration of web services," says Dr Taylor. "We specialise in information systems architectures, methodologies and tools for information infrastructures in government and large corporations and invite contact from organisations interested in working with us."

"The APPD integrates existing reference databases enabling efficient retrieval of detailed information," says Australian Chief Plant Protection Officer, Dr Bill Roberts. "The system will provide critical support to decision making during emergency management of incursions by exotic plant pests, bids for market access and justification of quarantine measures to exclude potentially harmful, exotic organisms."

The APPD partnership has successfully brought together Commonwealth and State agencies. Data providers in the initial phase of the project are CSIRO, NSW Agriculture, Queensland Department of Primary Industries, Department of Natural Resources and Environment Victoria, and Western Australia Department of Agriculture, with further agencies from state government, university and industry to follow in subsequent phases.

Access to the APPD will initially be restricted to Australian government scientists directly involved in plant health and biosecurity issues in Australia.

CSIRO's Internet Marketplaces group is part of the CRC for Enterprise Distributed Systems Technology.

http://www.csiro.au

About: CSIRO
CSIRO is Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation.

As one of the world's largest and most diverse scientific global research organisations, work touches every aspect of Australian life: from the molecules that build life to the molecules in space.

Working from sites across the nation and around the globe, our 6500 staff are focussed on providing new ways to improve quality of life, as well as the economic and social performance of a number of industry sectors, through research and development.

These sectors are:

Agribusiness
Energy and Transport
Environment and Natural Resources
Health
Information, Communication and Services
Manufacturing
Mineral Resources


More News:
  • For April 2002
  • From CSIRO
  • For Contract Research Organisation

 

©2008 New Materials International