Browse   byTaxon | Subject


Browse by Region
World
Europe
Asia
Australasia
Africa
Americas
Pacific
Polar
Oceans
None

Browse by
Issue
Author
Article

List of Journals

Our Services
Web Services
For Authors
For Librarians
For Booksellers
For Publishers
Services for Journals

Home About Pensoft Books E-Books Journals Email/RSS Alerts News Contact Register/Log In
in by
(0 items)

| Journal Home | About | Journal Search | Current Issue | All Issues |
ZooKeys

ZooKeys 150 (2011) : Special issue: 71-87
e-Infrastructures for data publishing in biodiversity science


Biodiversity information platforms: From standards to interoperability

Walter Berendsohn, Anton Güntsch, Niels Hoffmann, Andreas Kohlbecker, Katja Luther, Andreas Müller
doi: 10.3897/zookeys.150.2166
Published: 28.11.2011

Viewed by: 1201
Abstract

One of the most serious bottlenecks in the scientific workflows of biodiversity sciences is the need to integrate data from different sources, software applications, and services for analysis, visualisation and publication. For more than a quarter of a century the TDWG Biodiversity Information Standards organisation has a central role in defining and promoting data standards and protocols supporting interoperability between disparate and locally distributed systems. Although often not sufficiently recognized, TDWG standards are the foundation of many popular Biodiversity Informatics applications and infrastructures ranging from small desktop software solutions to large scale international data networks. However, individual scientists and groups of collaborating scientist have difficulties in fully exploiting the potential of standards that are often notoriously complex, lack non-technical documentations, and use different representations and underlying technologies. In the last few years, a series of initiatives such as Scratchpads, the EDIT Platform for Cybertaxonomy, and biowikifarm have started to implement and set up virtual work platforms for biodiversity sciences which shield their users from the complexity of the underlying standards. Apart from being practical work-horses for numerous working processes related to biodiversity sciences, they can be seen as information brokers mediating information between multiple data standards and protocols. The ViBRANT project will further strengthen the flexibility and power of virtual biodiversity working platforms by building software interfaces between them, thus facilitating essential information flows needed for comprehensive data exchange, data indexing, web-publication, and versioning. This work will make an important contribution to the shaping of an international, interoperable, and user-oriented biodiversity information infrastructure.

Full text: HTML | XML | PDF

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 (CC-BY).
Tools
Abstract
HTML | Larger View
XML
PDF
Order reprints
Download citation

Comments
  Make a comment

Post this Article
Notify colleague
Email the author

Article Views
Viewed by : 1201
Most visited papers

Related Information
Subject categories
Theory & Methodology : 33 article(s) 6 book(s) 2 e-chapter(s)
Bioinformatics: 34 article(s) 3 book(s)
Website design and publishing framework: Copyright © 2012 Pensoft Publishers | Contact us