Biodiversity Information Science and Standards :
Conference Abstract
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Corresponding author: Nicky Nicolson (n.nicolson@kew.org)
Received: 06 Sep 2023 | Published: 08 Sep 2023
© 2023 Nicky Nicolson, Eve Lucas
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation:
Nicolson N, Lucas E (2023) The Role of the OLS Program in the Development of echinopscis (an Extensible Notebook for Open Science on Specimens). Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 7: e112318. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.7.112318
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Starting in early 2022, biodiversity informatics researchers at Kew have been developing echinopscis: an "extensible notebook for open science on specimens". This aims to build on the early experiments that our community conducted with "e-taxonomy": the development of tools and techniques to enable taxonomic research to be conducted online. Early e-taxonomic tools (e.g., Scratchpads
OLS (originally Open Life Sciences) is a training and mentoring program for Open Science leaders with a focus on community building. The name was recently (2023) made more generic—"Open Seeds"—whilst retaining their well-known acronym "OLS"*
This talk will briefly outline the work that we have done to setup and experiment with echinopscis, but will focus on the impact that the OLS program has had in its development. We will also include the use of techniques learned through OLS in other biodiversity informatics projects. OLS acknowledges that their program receives relatively few applications from project leads in biodiversity and we hope that this talk will be informative for Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG) participants and can be used to build productive links between these communities.
e-taxonomy, skills development, taxonomic tools
Nicky Nicolson
TDWG 2023
This is somewhat similar the evolution of the TDWG name from "Taxonomic Databases Working Group" to "Biodiversity Information Standards", where we too have retained our well known acronym, "TDWG".