Biodiversity Information Science and Standards : Conference Abstract
|
Corresponding author: Philippe Grandcolas (pg@mnhn.fr)
Received: 19 Jun 2019 | Published: 26 Jun 2019
© 2019 Philippe Grandcolas
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: Grandcolas P (2019) The Rise of “Digital Biology”: We need not only open, FAIR but also sustainable data! Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 3: e37508. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.3.37508
|
|
Biology has already experienced great divides that decreased its global coherence and its ability to answer important scientific and societal concerns. For example in the XXth century, the so-called “Life Sciences” developed remarkably in comparison to Natural History sciences. This way, the approaches on model organisms dominated or prevented other approaches from being carried out on more diverse organisms, which may have given a misleading feeling of generality for the results obtained. Another great divide is at risk of developing now with the rise of what could be called “Digital Biology,” separating from other “material-based” approaches in its tendency to consider digital data only. Some biologists adopt a somewhat essentialist view of species and DNA, considering that enough knowledge is now accumulated, and that species records can be kept and saved as digital data only (
digital, biology, open science, FAIR data, sustainable
Philippe Grandcolas
Biodiversity_Next 2019