| Literature DB >> 26022532 |
A Townsend Peterson1, Jorge Soberón2, Leonard Krishtalka3.
Abstract
Biodiversity informatics is a field that is growing rapidly in data infrastructure, tools, and participation by researchers worldwide from diverse disciplines and with diverse, innovative approaches. A recent 'decadal view' of the field laid out a vision that was nonetheless restricted and constrained by its European focus. Our alternative decadal view is global, i.e., it sees the worldwide scope and importance of biodiversity informatics as addressing five major, global goals: (1) mobilize existing knowledge; (2) share this knowledge and the experience of its myriad deployments globally; (3) avoid 'siloing' and reinventing the tools of knowledge deployment; (4) tackle biodiversity informatics challenges at appropriate scales; and (5) seek solutions to difficult challenges that are strategic.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26022532 PMCID: PMC4467596 DOI: 10.1186/s12898-015-0046-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ecol ISSN: 1472-6785 Impact factor: 2.964
Figure 1Summary of Digital Accessible Knowledge for countries worldwide, drawn from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility in January 2014, showing log10 of numbers of records coming from the within the country versus those being provided by institutions in other countries. Countries (many, from all continents) that serve no data are omitted from the graphic. The dashed line indicates even balance between records from inside and outside of the country.
Figure 2Global summary of completeness of knowledge of birds of the world at 10° spatial resolution. White none of avifauna documented, darkest red avifauna completely documented. From Peterson et al. (in prep.).