International Barcode of Life Project Gets Major Funding Boost in Lead-Up to Official Launch

By Biodiversity Institute Of Ontario - University Of Guelph, PRNE
Thursday, April 22, 2010

GUELPH, Canada, April 23, 2010 - The International Barcode of Life (iBOL) Secretariat today
announced major new funding for the world's largest biodiversity genomics
project. Paul Hebert, iBOL Scientific Director, said that four Canadian
agencies have made new commitments totaling $35 million, raising total
investments by these funders to $80 million.

Building on an earlier $5 million award, the Ontario Ministry
of Research and Innovation (MRI) today announced another $8.1 million over
the next five years to allow expansion of the informatics platform for DNA
barcode data.

Genome Canada's Board of Directors also announced that it is
extending its support for another year with a second funding installment of
$4.6 million. This follows the $2 million it provided in 2009-10 to initiate
the iBOL project.

"We are grateful for the vision shown by our federal and
provincial governments and their science funding agencies," said Dr. Hebert.
"Their leadership is enabling an initiative that will transform humanity's
relationship with other living organisms."

Dr. Hebert announced that official activation of iBOL will be
celebrated in Nagoya, Japan, on October 24, 2010 during the 10th Conference
of Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). Leaders of iBOL
and the CBD Secretariat will sign a Memorandum of Cooperation establishing a
framework for future collaboration between the two organizations.

Meanwhile, groundbreaking for the new Centre for Biodiversity
Genomics will take place this summer at the University of Guelph. This $18
million
facility, funded by the Canada Foundation for Innovation and MRI,
will house the iBOL Secretariat and key infrastructure needed to support iBOL
research.

Dr. Hebert also welcomed significant contributions from the
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada ($1.2 million for
new DNA barcoding research programs) and from Canada's International
Development Research Centre ($2.2 million to support iBOL participation in
Argentina, Costa Rica, Kenya, Peru and South Africa).

Dr. Faustino Siñeriz, Vice-President of Argentina's National
Council of Scientific and Technical Research, said the IDRC support
reinforced his organization's recent decision to upgrade Argentina's
participation in iBOL.

Paul Skelton, Director of the South African Institute for
Aquatic Biodiversity, said that the funding would make African biodiversity a
much more significant part of the iBOL research program.

The International Barcode of Life (iBOL) Project is a research
alliance spanning 26 countries and bringing together hundreds of scientists
in the task of collecting specimens, obtaining their DNA barcode records and
building an informatics platform to store and share this information for use
in species identification and discovery. By 2015, iBOL participants will
gather DNA barcode records for 5M specimens representing 500K species, an
effective identification system for species of economic and social importance
and the foundation for subsequent progress towards a barcode reference
library for all life.

    Contact:
    John Chenery
    Tel: +1-519-780-5483
    jchenery@uoguelph.ca

Contact: John Chenery, Tel: +1-519-780-5483, jchenery at uoguelph.ca

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