I'm not intimately familiar with E.O. Wilson's specifications or requirements for a biosurvey of the planet, but I will say that our members in certain capacities support all types of mapping requirements and databasing, including biodiversity. In theory, our members will be some of the first people called upon to provide solid base data and information in a geospatial sense so that any biodiversity mapping and follow-on can be built in a logical and reproducible fashion with real coordinates on the face of the earth.
So apart from the need for full biodiversity mapping in Canada--I'm not sure I'm qualified to comment on that, but our members would be some of those practitioners who support an effort such as that.