scholarly journals Development and Assessment of a Web-Based National Spatial Data Infrastructure for Nature-Based Solutions and Their Social, Hydrological, Ecological, and Environmental Co-Benefits

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (19) ◽  
pp. 11018
Author(s):  
Cyndi V. Castro ◽  
Hanadi S. Rifai

Comprehensive datasets for nature-based solutions (NBS), and their diverse relationships have not yet been accumulated into a deployable format. This research describes the development of a novel National Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI) system for NBS co-benefits throughout the contiguous United States. Here, we gather and integrate robust geospatial datasets from the social, ecological, environmental, and hydrologic domains using seamless, cloud-based data services to facilitate the trans-disciplinary assessment of NBSs as a function of society and Earth. This research enhances practical decision making and research by assimilating web-based datasets and describing the missing links between national policy and robust adoption of NBSs as a sustainability solution. This NSDI serves to foster participatory planning capabilities and integrate local sustainability goals into decision–support frameworks. Such a platform strengthens the knowledge base necessary for addressing multiple, co-evolving issues of societal relevance, an essential component of fully espousing NBSs within the realm of socio-technological systems and improving policies and implementation regarding sustainable solutions. The efficacy of the proposed platform to serve as a holistic data information system is assessed by exploring important characteristics associated with geospatial NSDI tools, namely, openness, spatial functionality, scalability, and standardization. By placing GIS strengths and weaknesses in the context of transdisciplinary NBSs, we reveal strategic directions toward further co-production of such NSDIs. We conclude with recommendations for facilitating a shared vision of transdisciplinary technologies to strengthen the amalgamation of broad co-benefits and multi-disciplinary influences in sustainability planning.

2013 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 553-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonas Eberle ◽  
Siegfried Clausnitzer ◽  
Christian Hüttich ◽  
Christiane Schmullius

Author(s):  
Caitlin Kelly Maurie

Geospatial data and the technologies that drive them have altered the landscape of our understanding of the world around us. The data, software and services related to geospatial information have given us the opportunity to visualize existing phenomena, to understand connections, and to address problems from environmental management to emergency response. From the everpresent Google Earth images we are shown in our televised weather reports to the 3D flyovers of war zones on the news, geospatial information is everywhere. In the decade or so since U.S. President William Clinton set the stage by announcing the establishment of the National Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI), the concept of the geospatial data clearinghouse has shifted dramatically to fulfill the increasing need to streamline government processes, increase collaboration, and to meet the demands of data users and data developers (Clinton, 1994). The announcement of the NSDI gave birth to a Global Spatial Data Infrastructure (GSDI) movement that would be supported by a network of SDIs or geospatial data clearinghouses from local, state, and national levels. From this point on, the evolution of the geospatial data clearinghouse has been rapid and punctuated with challenges to both the developer and the user. From the earliest incarnations of these now pervasive resources as simple FTP data transfer sites to the latest developments in Internet Map Services and real time data services, geospatial data clearinghouses have provided the backbone for the exponential growth of Geographic Information Systems (GIS). In this section, the authors will examine the background of the geospatial data clearinghouse movement, address the basic phases of clearinghouse development, and review the trends that have taken the world’s clearinghouses from FTP to Internet Map Services and beyond.


Author(s):  
Lars Brodersen ◽  
Anders Nielsen

The introduction of web-services as index-portals based on geo-information has changed the conditions for both content and form of geo-communication. A high number of players and interactions as well as a very high number of all kinds of information and combinations of these characterize web-services, where maps are only a part of the whole. This chapter discusses the relations between the different components of SDI and geo-communication as well as the impact thereof. Discussed is also a model for the organization of the passive components of the infrastructure; i.e. legislation, collaboration, standards, models, specifications, web-services and finally the information. Awareness of the complexity is necessary, and structure is needed to make it possible for the geo-information community to pull together in the same direction. Modern web-based geo-communication and its infrastructure looks very complex, and it will get even more complex! Therefore there is a strong need for theories and models that can describe this complex web in the SDI and geo-communication consisting of active components, passive components, users and information in order to make it possible to handle the complexity and to give the necessary framework.


2016 ◽  
Vol 910 (4) ◽  
pp. 18-25
Author(s):  
S.S. Dyshlyuk ◽  
◽  
O.N. Nikolaeva ◽  
L.A. Romashova ◽  
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