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         xml:lang="eng">
    <dataset>
        <alternateIdentifier>https://ipt.gbif.org/resource?r=rapid_inventory_32</alternateIdentifier>
        <shortName>RI-32</shortName>
        <title xml:lang="eng">Rapid Inventory 32 Guyana: Acarai-Corentyne Corridor (TEST)</title>
        <creator>
            <individualName>
                <givenName>Zachary</givenName>
                <surName>Kachian</surName>
            </individualName>
            <organizationName>Field Museum of Natural History</organizationName>
            <positionName>Data Manager</positionName>
            <address>
                <city>Chicago</city>
                <administrativeArea>Illinois</administrativeArea>
                <postalCode>60605</postalCode>
                <country>US</country>
            </address>
            <electronicMailAddress>zkachian@fieldmuseum.org</electronicMailAddress>
        </creator>
        <metadataProvider>
            <individualName>
                <givenName>Zachary</givenName>
                <surName>Kachian</surName>
            </individualName>
            <organizationName>Field Museum of Natural History</organizationName>
            <positionName>Data Manager</positionName>
            <address>
                <city>Chicago</city>
                <administrativeArea>Illinois</administrativeArea>
                <postalCode>60605</postalCode>
                <country>US</country>
            </address>
            <electronicMailAddress>zkachian@fieldmuseum.org</electronicMailAddress>
        </metadataProvider>
        <metadataProvider>
            <individualName>
                <givenName>Nigel</givenName>
                <surName>Pitman</surName>
            </individualName>
            <organizationName>Field Museum of Natural History</organizationName>
            <positionName>Senior Conservation Ecologist</positionName>
            <address>
                <city>Chicago</city>
                <administrativeArea>Illinois</administrativeArea>
                <postalCode>60605</postalCode>
                <country>US</country>
            </address>
            <electronicMailAddress>npitman@fieldmuseum.org</electronicMailAddress>
        </metadataProvider>
        <pubDate>
            2025-10-14
        </pubDate>
        <language>eng</language>
        <abstract>
            <para>This is a test dataset of a rapid biological inventory conducted in the Acarai-Corentyne Corridor of Guyana in collaboration between the Field Museum of Natural History, the Guyana Protected Areas Commission, and the Guyana Environmental Protection Agency.</para>
        </abstract>
        <keywordSet>
            <keyword>Samplingevent</keyword>
            <keywordThesaurus>GBIF Dataset Type Vocabulary: http://rs.gbif.org/vocabulary/gbif/dataset_type_2015-07-10.xml</keywordThesaurus>
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        <intellectualRights>
            <para>To the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the <ulink url="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode"><citetitle>Public Domain (CC0 1.0)</citetitle></ulink>. Users may copy, modify, distribute and use the work, including for commercial purposes, without restriction.</para>
        </intellectualRights>
        <licensed>
            <licenseName>Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal</licenseName>
            <url>https://spdx.org/licenses/CC0-1.0.html</url>
            <identifier>CC0-1.0</identifier>
        </licensed>
        <distribution scope="document">
            <online>
                <url function="information">https://www.rapidinventories.fieldmuseum.org/ri-32</url>
            </online>
        </distribution>
        <coverage>
            <geographicCoverage>
                <geographicDescription>Acarai-Corentyne Corridor of southern Guyana.</geographicDescription>
                <boundingCoordinates>
                    <westBoundingCoordinate>-58.271</westBoundingCoordinate>
                    <eastBoundingCoordinate>-57.821</eastBoundingCoordinate>
                    <northBoundingCoordinate>3.535</northBoundingCoordinate>
                    <southBoundingCoordinate>1.769</southBoundingCoordinate>
                </boundingCoordinates>
            </geographicCoverage>
            <temporalCoverage>
                <rangeOfDates>
                    <beginDate>
                        <calendarDate>2024-10-17</calendarDate>
                    </beginDate>
                    <endDate>
                        <calendarDate>2024-11-24</calendarDate>
                    </endDate>
                </rangeOfDates>
            </temporalCoverage>
            <taxonomicCoverage>
                <generalTaxonomicCoverage>Vertebrates and plants.</generalTaxonomicCoverage>
                <taxonomicClassification>
                    <taxonRankName>class</taxonRankName>
                    <taxonRankValue>Aves</taxonRankValue>
                    <commonName>Birds</commonName>
                </taxonomicClassification>
                <taxonomicClassification>
                    <taxonRankName>class</taxonRankName>
                    <taxonRankValue>Mammalia</taxonRankValue>
                    <commonName>Mammals</commonName>
                </taxonomicClassification>
                <taxonomicClassification>
                    <taxonRankName>class</taxonRankName>
                    <taxonRankValue>Repitilia</taxonRankValue>
                    <commonName>Reptiles</commonName>
                </taxonomicClassification>
                <taxonomicClassification>
                    <taxonRankName>class</taxonRankName>
                    <taxonRankValue>Amphibia</taxonRankValue>
                    <commonName>Amphibians</commonName>
                </taxonomicClassification>
                <taxonomicClassification>
                    <taxonRankName>class</taxonRankName>
                    <taxonRankValue>Actinopterygii</taxonRankValue>
                    <commonName>Ray-finned fish</commonName>
                </taxonomicClassification>
                <taxonomicClassification>
                    <taxonRankName>unranked</taxonRankName>
                    <taxonRankValue>Embryophyta</taxonRankValue>
                    <commonName>Land plants</commonName>
                </taxonomicClassification>
            </taxonomicCoverage>
        </coverage>
        <purpose>The goal of rapid biological and social inventories is to catalyze effective action for conservation in threatened regions of high biological diversity and uniqueness. During rapid biological inventories, scientific teams focus primarily on groups of organisms that indicate habitat type and condition and that can be surveyed quickly and accurately. These inventories do not attempt to produce an exhaustive list of species or higher taxa. Rather, the rapid surveys (1) identify the important biological communities in the site or region of interest and (2) determine whether these communities are of outstanding quality and significance in a regional or global context. During rapid social asset inventories, scientists and local communities collaborate to identify patterns of social organization and opportunities for capacity building. The teams use participant observation and semi-structured interviews to quickly evaluate the assets of these communities that can serve as points of engagement for long-term participation in conservation. In-country scientists are central to the field teams. The experience of local experts is crucial for understanding areas with little or no history of scientific exploration. After the inventories, protection of natural communities and engagement of social networks rely on initiatives from host-country scientists and conservationists. Once these rapid inventories have been completed (typically within a month), the teams relay the survey information to local and international decision makers who set priorities and guide conservation action in the host country. The rapid biological inventory teams use protocols that are specific to the organism groups under study and which are often modified to meet the demands of a particular expedition. If you are interested in the specifics of these protocols, please look at the "Methods" section for each organism group (plants, birds, mammals, fish, amphibians and reptiles, etc.) in the "Technical Report" section of each rapid biological inventory report. Further information: https://pj.fieldmuseum.org/event/1a8857bc-763a-4fa1-ad0b-d7a2ce5ae1d5</purpose>
        <maintenance>
            <description>
                <para></para>
            </description>
            <maintenanceUpdateFrequency>unknown</maintenanceUpdateFrequency>
        </maintenance>
        <contact>
            <individualName>
                <givenName>Zachary</givenName>
                <surName>Kachian</surName>
            </individualName>
            <organizationName>Field Museum of Natural History</organizationName>
            <positionName>Data Manager</positionName>
            <address>
                <city>Chicago</city>
                <administrativeArea>Illinois</administrativeArea>
                <postalCode>60605</postalCode>
                <country>US</country>
            </address>
            <electronicMailAddress>zkachian@fieldmuseum.org</electronicMailAddress>
        </contact>
        <methods>
            <methodStep>
                <description>
                    <para>Full step description can be found in the Rapid Inventory 32 report (https://www.rapidinventories.fieldmuseum.org/ri-32).</para>
                </description>
            </methodStep>
            <sampling>
                <studyExtent>
                    <description>
                        <para>Full description of the study extent can be found in the Rapid Inventory 32 report (https://www.rapidinventories.fieldmuseum.org/ri-32).</para>
                    </description>
                </studyExtent>
                <samplingDescription>
                    <para>The full sampling description can be found in the Rapid Inventory 32 report (https://www.rapidinventories.fieldmuseum.org/ri-32).</para>
                </samplingDescription>
            </sampling>
        </methods>
        <project>
            <title>Rapid Inventory 32</title>
            <personnel>
                <individualName>
                    <givenName>Zachary</givenName>
                    <surName>Kachian</surName>
                </individualName>
                <role>pointOfContact</role>
            </personnel>
        </project>
    </dataset>
    <additionalMetadata>
        <metadata>
            <gbif>
                <dateStamp>2025-10-13T20:45:10.926+00:00</dateStamp>
                <hierarchyLevel>dataset</hierarchyLevel>
                <citation>Pitman, Nigel, Cameron Rutt, Lesley S. de Souza, R. Elliott Oakley, Farah Carrasco-Rueda, Sophie Picq, and Jeremy M. Campbell, eds. 2025. Guyana: Acarai-Corentyne Corridor. Rapid Biological and  Social Inventories Report 32. Field Museum, Chicago. https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/215501.</citation>
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