| Literature DB >> 26491393 |
Yde de Jong1, Juliana Kouwenberg2, Louis Boumans3, Charles Hussey4, Roger Hyam5, Nicola Nicolson6, Paul Kirk6, Alan Paton6, Ellinor Michel7, Michael D Guiry8, Phillip S Boegh9, Henrik Ærenlund Pedersen10, Henrik Enghoff10, Eckhard von Raab-Straube11, Anton Güntsch11, Marc Geoffroy11, Andreas Müller11, Andreas Kohlbecker11, Walter Berendsohn11, Ward Appeltans12, Christos Arvanitidis13, Bart Vanhoorne14, Joram Declerck14, Leen Vandepitte14, Francisco Hernandez14, Róisín Nash15, Mark John Costello16, David Ouvrard7, Pascale Bezard-Falgas17, Thierry Bourgoin18, Florian Tobias Wetzel19, Falko Glöckler19, Günther Korb19, Caroline Ring19, Gregor Hagedorn19, Christoph Häuser19, Nihat Aktaç20, Ahmet Asan20, Adorian Ardelean21, Paulo Alexandre Vieira Borges22, Dhimiter Dhora23, Hasmik Khachatryan24, Michael Malicky25, Shaig Ibrahimov26, Alexander Tuzikov27, Aaike De Wever28, Snejana Moncheva29, Nikolai Spassov30, Karel Chobot31, Alexi Popov30, Igor Boršić32, Spyros Sfenthourakis33, Urmas Kõljalg34, Pertti Uotila35, Gargominy Olivier17, Jean-Claude Dauvin36, David Tarkhnishvili37, Giorgi Chaladze37, Michael Tuerkay38, Anastasios Legakis39, László Peregovits40, Gudmundur Gudmundsson41, Erling Ólafsson41, Liam Lysaght42, Bella Sarah Galil43, Francesco M Raimondo44, Gianniantonio Domina44, Fabio Stoch45, Alessandro Minelli46, Voldermars Spungis47, Eduardas Budrys48, Sergej Olenin49, Armand Turpel50, Tania Walisch50, Vladimir Krpach51, Marie Therese Gambin52, Laurentia Ungureanu53, Gordan Karaman54, Roy M J C Kleukers55, Elisabeth Stur56, Kaare Aagaard56, Nils Valland57, Toril Loennechen Moen57, Wieslaw Bogdanowicz58, Piotr Tykarski59, Jan Marcin Węsławski60, Monika Kędra60, Antonio M de Frias Martins61, António Domingos Abreu62, Ricardo Silva63, Sergei Medvedev64, Alexander Ryss64, Smiljka Šimić65, Karol Marhold66, Eduard Stloukal67, Davorin Tome68, Marian A Ramos69, Benito Valdés70, Francisco Pina70, Sven Kullander71, Anders Telenius71, Yves Gonseth72, Pascal Tschudin72, Oleksandra Sergeyeva73, Volodymyr Vladymyrov73, Volodymyr Bohdanovych Rizun74, Chris Raper7, Dan Lear75, Pavel Stoev76, Lyubomir Penev77, Ana Casino Rubio78, Thierry Backeljau28, Hannu Saarenmaa79, Sandrine Ulenberg55.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reliable taxonomy underpins communication in all of biology, not least nature conservation and sustainable use of ecosystem resources. The flexibility of taxonomic interpretations, however, presents a serious challenge for end-users of taxonomic concepts. Users need standardised and continuously harmonised taxonomic reference systems, as well as high-quality and complete taxonomic data sets, but these are generally lacking for non-specialists. The solution is in dynamic, expertly curated web-based taxonomic tools. The Pan-European Species-directories Infrastructure (PESI) worked to solve this key issue by providing a taxonomic e-infrastructure for Europe. It strengthened the relevant social (expertise) and information (standards, data and technical) capacities of five major community networks on taxonomic indexing in Europe, which is essential for proper biodiversity assessment and monitoring activities. The key objectives of PESI were: 1) standardisation in taxonomic reference systems, 2) enhancement of the quality and completeness of taxonomic data sets and 3) creation of integrated access to taxonomic information. NEW INFORMATION: This paper describes the results of PESI and its future prospects, including the involvement in major European biodiversity informatics initiatives and programs.Entities:
Keywords: AlgaeBase; Authority File; EU-nomen; EUBON; Euro+Med PlantBase; European Register of Marine Species; European taxonomic backbone; Fauna Europaea; Global Names Architecture; INSPIRE; Index Fungorum; International Plant Names Index (IPNI); LifeWatch; Nomenclature; PESI; Taxonomic indexing; Taxonomy; ZooBank
Year: 2015 PMID: 26491393 PMCID: PMC4609752 DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.3.e5848
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biodivers Data J ISSN: 1314-2828
Figure 1.Five community networks (horizontal) are integrated in five categories of coordination effort (vertical) in PESI. Community networks represent the FP4 and FP5 key programs on European taxonomic indexing: Fauna Europaea, ERMS, Euro+Med PlantBase, supplemented by Index Fungorum and AlgaeBase.
Figure 2.PESI Expert Communities Common Infrastructure outline, showing a common governance organisation, including relevant expert(ise) network management tools.
Figure 3.Europe's integrated taxonomic workforce as established in EDIT and PESI, brought together (as a pilot) into a shared expert system.
Figure 4.The Open Source Society network as an analogy for modelling the future Taxonomic Community.
Figure 5.PESI Focal Points Network, showing the respective Fauna Europaea, Euro+PlantBase and ERMS focal point partners. Northern African 'proto focal points' are indicated with open circles. Pan-Caucasian Plant Biodiversity Initiative partners are indicated with green asterisks.
Focal Points network details are described in Suppl. material 34.
Figure 6.The role of PESI Focal Points as an addition to the expert network.
Figure 7.Simplified architecture of the EDIT Platform for Cybertaxonomy. Internal data stores are encapsulated by Java and web service APIs.
Figure 8.Information flow for merging and publication of checklist data in PESI (after Suppl. material 20).
Figure 9.Simplyfied Catalogue of Life Architecture, showing two PESI contributions: Euro-Hub development and governance of EU-based GSD.
Figure 10.PESI web-portal homepage (screenshot).
Figure 11.PESI web-portal statistics showing the number of unique (monthly) visitors and the number of (monthly) visits since the start of the project (see: Suppl. material 35).
Figure 12.PESI web-portal advanced search interface (screenshot).
Figure 13.PESI web-portal example of a search and output of all species and infraspecies of molluscs
Figure 14.PESI Portal and PESI Datawarehouse (version 3) statistics. Source: http://www.eu-nomen.eu/portal/stats.php.
Figure 15.Aspects of increased biodiversity platform interoperability as established in the ViBRANT project (after: Suppl. material 29).
Figure 16.Example of virtual lab application (Fauna Europaea VRE pilot), showing the species distribution predictions of , using the BioVel Portal.
Figure 17.Screen capture of a biodiversity dedicated user interface in myBiOSis environment.
Figure 18.Screen capture of the Assessment toolkit in myBiOSis environment. This figure demonstrates flexibility of the system to accommodate distinct projects and research scopes.
Figure 19.LifeWatch marine virtual research environment (VRE) (source: http://marine.lifewatch.eu).
Figure 20.Potential workflows in a next generation linked open-data names architecture.
Figure 21.Global Names Architecture schematic representation of three cross-reference layers model.
Figure 22.An example ZooBank page (), illustrating several GNUB services: (1) user authentication; (2) “fuzzy” searching of GNUB content; (3) APIs and services; (4) ZooBank registration; (5) External Identifier cross-linking; (6) BHL page linking; (7) similar/related name discovery (via GNI’s name searching service); and (8) multi-lingual support. Not shown are services to manage user accounts, de-duplicate records, prototype reconciliation tools, services for journal publishers, and visualization tools for author publication history and other statistics.