建立澳大利亚国家物种名录

Endymion Cooper, G. Whitbread, Anne Fuchs
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引用次数: 0

摘要

澳大利亚国家物种名录(AuNSL)是一个统一的,全国公认的,澳大利亚本地和归化的生物群分类。它来源于一组以分类单元为重点的资源,包括澳大利亚植物名称索引和澳大利亚植物普查,澳大利亚动物目录,以及真菌,地衣和苔藓植物的类似列表。这些资源共享一个共同的基础设施,为单一国家分类法(AuNSL)做出贡献,但保留其独立的策展实践和在线展示。目前,澳大利亚生物多样性数据库是国家核心基础设施,为重要的生物多样性数据基础设施提供名称和分类,包括澳大利亚生活地图集、陆地生态系统研究网络、生物多样性数据存储库和物种概况和威胁数据库。作为澳大利亚独特的生物多样性的名称和分类的首选资源,澳大利亚国家自然图书馆必须不断更新,以反映分类和命名的变化。对于一些分类类群,unsl基本上是完整的,并且新分类群和其他新分类的合并几乎没有时间延迟。对于其他分类群体,数据是不完整的,更新也是零星的。与类似的项目一样,美国国立自然科学图书馆将受益于分类学数据发布和共享的改进。这样的改进有可能实现对新的分类和命名数据的自动化、实时摄取,允许管理员将时间重新定向到从分散和复杂的文献中回填历史数据。理想情况下,unsl将能够受益于处理历史数据的自动化方法的进步,包括通过共享这些数据的标准化表示。在这里,我们概述了AuNSL数据模型、编辑器功能,并描述了我们通过现有和新兴标准(如Darwin Core和Taxon Concept Schema (TCS2))共享数据的方法。然后,我们描述了作为已出版作品分类数据的消费者,我们真正需要从出版商那里获得新的和重新处理的历史数据。简而言之,我们需要符合适当标准的结构化分类数据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Building the Australian National Species List
The Australian National Species List (AuNSL) is a unified, nationally accepted, taxonomy for the native and naturalised biota of Australia. It is derived from a set of taxon-focussed resources including the Australian Plant Name Index and Australian Plant Census, the Australian Faunal Directory, and similar lists of fungi, lichens and bryophytes. These resources share a common infrastructure, contribute to the single national taxonomy (AuNSL), but retain their independent curation practices and online presentation. The AuNSL is now the core national infrastructure providing names and taxonomy for significant biodiversity data infrastructures including the Atlas of Living Australia, the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network, the Biodiversity Data Repository, and the Species Profile and Threats Database. As the go-to resource for names and taxonomy for Australia’s unique biodiversity, the AuNSL must be constantly updated to reflect taxonomic and nomenclatural change. For some taxonomic groups, the AuNSL is substantially complete, and the incorporation of new taxa and other novelties occurs with little time lag. For other taxonomic groups the data are patchy and updates sporadic. Like similar projects, the AuNSL would benefit from improvements to taxonomic data publishing and sharing. Such improvements have the potential to enable automated, real-time ingestion for new taxonomic and nomenclatural data, allowing curator time to be re-directed to backfilling the historical data from a dispersed and complex literature. Ideally, the AuNSL will be able to benefit from advances in automated approaches to processing the historical data, including via the sharing of standardised representations of such data. Here we outline the AuNSL data model, editor functionality, and describe our approach to sharing our data via existing and emerging standards such as Darwin Core and Taxon Concept Schema (TCS2). We then describe what we, as consumers of taxonomic data from published works, really need from publishers of new, and reprocessed historical data. In brief, we need structured taxonomic data conforming to an adequate standard.
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