Biodiversity Information Science and Standards :
Conference Abstract
|
Corresponding author: Donald Hobern (dhobern@gmail.com)
Received: 05 Oct 2020 | Published: 09 Oct 2020
© 2020 Donald Hobern, Deborah L Paul, Tim Robertson, Quentin Groom, Barbara Thiers, Alex Asase, Maofang Luo, Patrick Semal, Matt Woodburn, Eliza Zschuschen
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:
Hobern D, Paul DL, Robertson T, Groom Q, Thiers B, Asase A, Luo M, Semal P, Woodburn M, Zschuschen E (2020) Advancing the Catalogue of the World’s Natural History Collections. Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 4: e59324. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.4.59324
|
Information about natural history collections helps to map the complex landscape of research resources and assists researchers in locating and contacting the holders of specimens. Collection records contribute to the development of a fully interlinked biodiversity knowledge graph (
A number of international (e.g., Index Herbariorum, GRSciColl) regional (e.g. DiSSCo and CETAF) national (e.g., ALA and the Living Atlases, iDigBio US Collections Catalog) and institutional networks (e.g., The Field Museum) separately document subsets of the world's collections, and the Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG) Collection Descriptions Interest Group is actively developing standards to support information sharing on collections. However, these efforts do not yet combine to deliver a comprehensive and connected view of all collections globally.
The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) received funding as part of the European Commission-funded SYNTHESYS+ 7 project to explore development of a roadmap towards delivering such a view, in part as a contribution towards the establishment of DiSSCo services within a global ecosystem of collection catalogues. Between 17 and 29 April 2020, a coordination team comprising international representatives from multiple networks ran Advancing the Catalogue of the World’s Natural History Collections, a fully online consultation using the GBIF Discourse forum platform to guide discussion around 26 consultation topics identified in an initial Ideas Paper (
The consultation confirmed broad agreement around the needs and goals for a comprehensive catalogue of the world’s natural history collections, along with possible strategies to overcome the challenges. This presentation will summarise the results and recommendations.
collections, catalogue, Index Herbariorum, DiSSCo, CETAF, GBIF, GRSciColl, ALA, iDigBio
Donald Hobern
TDWG 2020
Horizon 2020, H2020-INFRAIA-2018-2020 – Grant Agreement No. 823827