Enabling Africa’s implementation of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework through the African digital sequence information data bank

dc.contributor.authorAnne WT Muigai
dc.contributor.authorAchraf El Allali
dc.contributor.authorJulien Alban Nguinkal
dc.contributor.authorSally Mueni Katee
dc.contributor.authorGirish Beedessee
dc.contributor.authorBouabid Badaoui
dc.contributor.authorMarietjie Botes
dc.contributor.authorSemir Bechir Suheil Gaouar
dc.contributor.authorIchrak Hayah
dc.contributor.authorJustin Eze Ideozu
dc.contributor.authorSadik Muzemil
dc.contributor.authorDenye Nathaniel Ogeh
dc.contributor.authorAbdoallah Sharaf
dc.contributor.authorKassahun Tesfaye
dc.contributor.authorThankGod Echezona Ebenezer
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-26T16:56:57Z
dc.date.available2025-01-26T16:56:57Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.description.abstractThe African BioGenome Project (AfricaBP) is a Pan-African effort aimed at sequencing the genomes of 105,000 African endemic and indigenous species to support food systems, conservation, and ensure data-sharing and equitable benefits. This effort aligns with the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (KMGBF), which aims to prevent or mitigate biodiversity loss while facilitating equitable access and benefit-sharing from genetic resources and Digital Sequence Information (DSI) and securing adequate technical and scientific cooperations. The AfricaBP Open Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics (AfricaBP Open Institute) is the knowledge exchange programme of the AfricaBP which aims to overcome infrastructural barriers through the development of technology and infrastructure. A key component of AfricaBP Open Institute's vision is the establishment of the African Digital Sequence Information Data Bank for Biodiversity and Agriculture (African DSI Data Bank), a federated platform for storing, analyzing, visualizing and sharing DSI data across the African continent. The African DSI Data Bank will address the current fragmentation of DSI across African institutions by linking existing databases and resources while ensuring compliance with regional and global standards. It will use a federated model, leveraging existing (and new) infrastructures across Africa, that allow institutions and countries to retain data sovereignty while adhering to national, regional, and international access and benefit-sharing regulations. Through a proposed Global Access Point (GAP), researchers will be able to gain equitable access to sequence data and metadata via a decentralized network. Furthermore, to understand the current landscape of biodiversity and agricultural DSI databases, analyses, visualization, and data sharing platforms, AfricaBP Open Institute conducted a survey across Africa, and recorded 161 responses. Although the majority of these participants shared common challenges such as limited infrastructure, funding, and capacity building, the overwhelming indication was that they support an African-based DSI platform through an inclusive governance model. Consequently, we describe the proposed roadmap for the creation of an African DSI Data Bank that includes African DSI federated database, visualization, analysis, and sharing platforms, as well as the ethical, legal, social, KMGBF, and sustainability considerations associated with such an infrastructure.en
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.ndu.ac.ke/handle/123456789/50
dc.language.isoen
dc.titleEnabling Africa’s implementation of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework through the African digital sequence information data bank

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