News Release

OBIS selects OpenGeo for Web-based geospatial mapping

World's largest marine biogeographic database uses OpenGeo Suite to reach global audience

Business Announcement

Census of Marine Life

OpenGeo today announced that the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS) has selected OpenGeo Suite Enterprise Edition to replace their existing geospatial mapping tools. The product is a fully-integrated, open source geospatial platform for manipulating maps and data that provides enhanced capabilities like the ability to edit vector data through a web interface, imagery delivery and customized web application development. OpenGeo will provide unlimited support and bug fixes for PostGIS, GeoServer, OpenLayers and the rest of the open source platform to help OBIS extract intelligent data more easily from its 27 million record database and improve the ease of use for its global audience.

Dr. Edward Vanden Berghe, Executive Director of OBIS, said, "We are very enthusiastic about this collaboration. Our mapping systems were reaching capacity with the high volume of records and we had limited developer time to address the situation. We required a solution that harnessed the broad flexibility that open source provides plus advice and support to help us improve our core database. OpenGeo was able to work through these challenges to show us how to extract intelligent summaries from our data and share it in useful ways with our global constituents."

Dr. Vanden Berghe continued, "Through our host institute, Rutgers University, we have free access to the products of the market leaders in the proprietary world, but it was still cost prohibitive to run our database on them because each required engineers who were experts on the respective complexities. By contrast, the OpenGeo Suite Enterprise Edition is flexible and easy to understand so we are able to derive value from it without having to bring in expensive consultants. And even more important, we will be able to share any developments with our international partners, many of which are located in the developing world, and are not in a position to buy licenses to expensive proprietary software."

Created as the data integration component of the Census of Marine Life, (CoML, a global network of researchers in more than 80 nations engaged in a 10-year scientific initiative to assess and explain the diversity, distribution, and abundance of life in the oceans) OBIS has grown significantly beyond its original scope and now integrates data from many sources over a wide range of marine themes, from the poles to the equator, from microbes to whales. The expansion necessitated the development of a complex database and a formal review of several web-based geospatial mapping systems was undertaken by OBIS.

Chris Holmes, President of OpenGeo, expressed the importance of the deal by stating, "OBIS continues to pioneer the field of biogeographic data capture and we are very enthusiastic about working with them. We have been consistently impressed with the organization's work and by their vision for the database and we are eager to help them develop their ideas. The OpenGeo Suite Enterprise Edition offers a platform that was designed for the web, bringing the rich functionality of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to any web browser along with a powerful toolkit that supports specialized applications like OBIS's."

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About OpenGeo

OpenGeo is a social enterprise working to build the best web-based geospatial technology. The company brings the best practices of open source software to geospatial organizations around the world by providing enterprises with supported, tested, and integrated open source solutions to build the Geospatial Web. OpenGeo also supports open source communities by employing key developers of PostGIS, GeoServer, and OpenLayers. The company has a seven year history of providing successful consulting services and products to clients like Google, Tri-Met, Landgate, and the Open Geospatial Consortium. OpenGeo is the geospatial division of OpenPlans, a New York-based 501(c)(3) non-profit which informs and engages communities through journalism and open source software. All of OpenGeo's revenue has been and will continue to be re-invested into innovative and useful software in support of the OpenPlans mission.

About OBIS

The Ocean Biogeographic Information System, the Census database, is the world's largest on-line repository of spatially referenced marine life data, containing over 27 million records from more than 800 databases. OBIS allows us to find information about species from A to Z for all parts of the world's ocean in a permanent, evolving repository and to use this information to identify biodiversity hotspots and large-scale ecological patterns, analyze dispersion of species over time and space, and plot and compare species locations with temperature, salinity and depth, among many other uses.


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