Biodiversity Information Science and Standards : Conference Abstract
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Corresponding author: Jeremy A. Miller (jeremy.miller@naturalis.nl)
Received: 11 Jun 2019 | Published: 13 Jun 2019
© 2019 Jeremy Miller, Yanell Braumuller, Puneet Kishor, David Shorthouse, Mariya Dimitrova, Guido Sautter, Donat Agosti
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: Miller J, Braumuller Y, Kishor P, Shorthouse D, Dimitrova M, Sautter G, Agosti D (2019) Mobilizing Data from Taxonomic Literature for an Iconic Species (Dinosauria, Theropoda, Tyrannosaurus rex). Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 3: e37078. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.3.37078
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A vast amount of biodiversity data is reported in the primary taxonomic literature. In the past, we have demonstrated the use of semantic enhancement to extract data from taxonomic literature and make it available to a network of databases (
Tyrannosaurus rex is an iconic dinosaur with broad public appeal, as well as the subject of more than a century of scholarship. The Naturalis Biodiversity Center recently acquired a specimen that has become a major attraction in the public exhibit space. For most species on earth, the primary taxonomic literature contains nearly everything that is known about it. Every described species on earth is the subject of one or more taxonomic treatments. A taxon-based approach to semantic enhancement can mobilize all this knowledge using the network of databases and resources that comprise the modern biodiversity informatics infrastructure. When a particular species is of special interest, a taxon-based approach to semantic enhancement can be a powerful tool for scholarship and communication. In light of this, we resolved to semantically enhance all taxonomic treatments on T. rex. Our objective was to make these treatments and associated data available for the broad range of stakeholders who might have an interest in this animal, including professional paleontologists, the curious public, and museum exhibits and public communications personnel.
Among the routine parsing and data sharing activities in the Plazi workflow (
Jeremy A. Miller
Biodiversity_Next 2019