iDigBio, Florida State University, 142 Collegiate Loop, Tallahassee, FL 32306, USA
Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, 1659 Museum Road, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 Nov 19;374(1763):20170391. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0391.
The first two decades of the twenty-first century have seen a rapid rise in the mobilization of digital biodiversity data. This has thrust natural history museums into the forefront of biodiversity research, underscoring their central role in the modern scientific enterprise. The advent of mobilization initiatives such as the United States National Science Foundation's Advancing Digitization of Biodiversity Collections (ADBC), Australia's Atlas of Living Australia (ALA), Mexico's National Commission for the Knowledge and Use of Biodiversity (CONABIO), Brazil's Centro de Referência em Informação (CRIA) and China's National Specimen Information Infrastructure (NSII) has led to a rapid rise in data aggregators and an exponential increase in digital data for scientific research and arguably provide the best evidence of where species live. The international Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) now serves about 131 million museum specimen records, and Integrated Digitized Biocollections (iDigBio) in the USA has amassed more than 115 million. These resources expose collections to a wider audience of researchers, provide the best biodiversity data in the modern era outside of nature itself and ensure the primacy of specimen-based research. Here, we provide a brief history of worldwide data mobilization, their impact on biodiversity research, challenges for ensuring data quality, their contribution to scientific publications and evidence of the rising profiles of natural history collections.This article is part of the theme issue 'Biological collections for understanding biodiversity in the Anthropocene'.
二十一世纪的头二十年见证了数字生物多样性数据的迅速动员。这使自然历史博物馆成为了生物多样性研究的前沿,强调了它们在现代科学事业中的核心作用。动员倡议的出现,如美国国家科学基金会的推动生物多样性收藏数字化计划(ADBC)、澳大利亚的活生物图集(ALA)、墨西哥的国家生物多样性知识和利用委员会(CONABIO)、巴西的信息参考中心(CRIA)和中国的国家标本信息基础设施(NSII),导致了数据聚合器的迅速崛起和数字数据的指数级增长,为科学研究提供了生物多样性的最佳证据,并可能提供了物种生活在哪里的最佳证据。国际全球生物多样性信息设施(GBIF)现在提供了约 1.31 亿个博物馆标本记录,而美国的综合数字化生物收藏(iDigBio)则积累了超过 1.15 亿个标本。这些资源使收藏能够为更多的研究人员所接触,提供了现代生物多样性数据之外的最佳数据,确保了基于标本的研究的首要地位。在这里,我们简要介绍了全球范围内的数据动员情况、它们对生物多样性研究的影响、确保数据质量的挑战、它们对科学出版物的贡献以及自然历史收藏地位上升的证据。本文是主题为“生物多样性收集在人类世中的作用”的特刊的一部分。