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The Encyclopedia of Life: A Web Site for Every Species James Edwards Executive Director, EOL Barcode of Life Conference Taipei 20 September 2007
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The missing link in CBOL CBOL making excellent progress on: –Promoting barcodes –BOLD –Developing linkages with other projects –Adding barcode content –BARCODE standard –etc. One important component missing – Database of species information Enter the Encyclopedia of Life
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What is the EOL? 21st century on-line encyclopedia about Earth’s biological species With information about all currently accepted species And the millions more still to be described All presented in a common format But user configurable All freely available over the Internet And accessible from a common portal But with capability for users to develop their own entry-points
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Encyclopedia of Life Core: a separate web site for each of Earth’s known species –Estimated to be 1.8 million validly known species Each site contains: –Introductory page for general public Vetted by experts Source of the information indicated (“attribution”) With links to the scientific literature –Additional pages and entry points for diverse user groups Molecular & evolutionary biologists Taxonomists Horticulturists, bird watchers Biodiversity-based industries (fisheries) School children, teachers, citizen scientists
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Status of EOL Idea for EOL came from many people –Dan Janzen, Chris Thompson, ALL Species, E.O. Wilson … Until recently, IT technology was a limiting factor Current version of EOL launched May 2007 10-year cost ~ $70 m? $25 million committed by MacArthur and Sloan Foundations Cornerstone institutions pledged to raise additional $25 million Portal v1.0 to open in February 2008
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Partners All EOL’s activities are carried out in partnership with –Organizations –Institutions –Individuals
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Plan to develop species pages-- phase 1 (pilot) Work with existing organizations to port information into EOL (“low-hanging fruit”) –FishBase--species page
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Plan to develop species pages-- phase 1 (pilot) –Tree of Life Web--supraspecific pages
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Plan to develop species pages-- phase 1 (pilot) –Catalogue of Life--default taxonomy
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Plan to develop species pages-- phase 1 Milestone: –EOL portal, version 1, released in February 2008 More than 30,000 species pages Possibly other pages (amphibians) Many thousand additional pages (e.g. supraspecific pages)
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Plan to develop species pages-- phase 2 Work with taxonomic communities to prepare species pages in their areas –Oct. 2007--international meeting on plant species pages at Missouri Botanical Garden Aggregation (“mashup”) technology to pull information together for draft species pages Wiki technologies for page curators to authenticate data –Curators will be identified as the authors of the pages Prepare versions of EOL that will work on all platforms, from desktops to handhelds
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Plan to develop species pages-- phase 2 Expected partners: –Global Biodiversity Information Facility--specimen and observational data--maps –BOLD –Sequence databases –National/international projects Atlas of Living Australia IUCN Zoobank –Taxonomic communities
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Plan to develop species pages-- phase 2 Milestone: –Within five years, have 1 million species pages –Of varying levels of completeness
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Other components of EOL Biodiversity Heritage Library –Consortium of ten of the world’s largest natural history libraries –Plan to digitize world’s scientific biodiversity literature Estimate 320,000,000 printed pages Have digitized and marked up > 2 million pages –Taxonomic intelligence applied to all pages
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Other components of EOL Biodiversity Synthesis –Look across the species sites and identify novel uses “Macroscope” –Biodiversity Synthesis Center –Collaborations with user groups E.g., pollinators, ageing Education and Outreach –Schools at all levels –Citizen scientists (amateur naturalists, birdwatchers, horticulturists, etc. etc.) Tools to allow people to feed information back into the EOL
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A personal aside stimulated by Benoit Dayrat Fully agree with: –Need for an integrative approach to alpha taxonomy, coupled with monographic analyses –Insistence on having barcodes for all new types –Importance of taxonomists moving from cottage-industry to collaborative, on-line approach EOL, combined with resources being developed by EDIT and CATE, can be a valuable tool in these changes –Obviate each taxonomist spending time finding all the names again –Will also empower scientists in developing countries by providing on-line access to information and literature
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In conclusion Encyclopedia of Life will be an excellent resource for: –Aiding taxonomic research –Providing species-level information to everyone –Weaving together the many excellent biodiversity initiatives and programs –Serving DNA barcode data –Supporting decision makers It can serve as the species database for barcorders
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Join us on this grand adventure www.eol.org
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