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Digitization and the future of natural history collections

Authors :
Brandon Hedrick
Mason Heberling
Emily Meineke
Kathryn Turner
Christopher Grassa
Daniel Park
Jonathan Kennedy
Julia Clarke
Joseph Cook
David Blackburn
Scott Edwards
Charles Davis
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
PeerJ, 2019.

Abstract

Natural history collections (NHCs) are the foundation of historical baselines for assessing anthropogenic impacts on biodiversity. Along these lines, the online mobilization of specimens via digitization–the conversion of specimen data into accessible digital content–has greatly expanded the use of NHC collections across a diversity of disciplines. We broaden the current vision of digitization (Digitization 1.0)–whereby specimens are digitized within NHCs–to include new approaches that rely on digitized products rather than the physical specimen (Digitization 2.0). Digitization 2.0 builds upon the data, workflows, and infrastructure produced by Digitization 1.0 to create digital-only workflows that facilitate digitization, curation, and data linkages, thus returning value to physical specimens by creating new layers of annotation, empowering a global community, and developing automated approaches to advance biodiversity discovery and conservation. These efforts will transform large-scale biodiversity assessments to address fundamental questions including those pertaining to critical modern issues of global change.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....739b941d3166c361c52c3d754f16171a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7287/peerj.preprints.27859