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Recommendations for connecting molecular sequence and biodiversity research infrastructures through ELIXIR

Authors :
Waterhouse, Robert M
Adam-Blondon, Anne-Françoise
Agosti, Donat
Baldrian, Petr
Balech, Bachir
Corre, Erwan
Davey, Robert P
Lantz, Henrik
Pesole, Graziano
Quast, Christian
Glöckner, Frank Oliver
Raes, Niels
Sandionigi, Anna
Santamaria, Monica
Addink, Wouter
Vohradsky, Jiri
Nunes-Jorge, Amandine
Willassen, Nils Peder
Lanfear, Jerry
Waterhouse, Robert M
Adam-Blondon, Anne-Françoise
Agosti, Donat
Baldrian, Petr
Balech, Bachir
Corre, Erwan
Davey, Robert P
Lantz, Henrik
Pesole, Graziano
Quast, Christian
Glöckner, Frank Oliver
Raes, Niels
Sandionigi, Anna
Santamaria, Monica
Addink, Wouter
Vohradsky, Jiri
Nunes-Jorge, Amandine
Willassen, Nils Peder
Lanfear, Jerry
Source :
EPIC3F1000Research, F1000Research, 10, pp. elixir-1238, ISSN: 2046-1402
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Threats to global biodiversity are increasingly recognised by scientists and the public as a critical challenge. Molecular sequencing technologies offer means to catalogue, explore, and monitor the richness and biogeography of life on Earth. However, exploiting their full potential requires tools that connect biodiversity infrastructures and resources. As a research infrastructure developing services and technical solutions that help integrate and coordinate life science resources across Europe, ELIXIR is a key player. To identify opportunities, highlight priorities, and aid strategic thinking, here we survey approaches by which molecular technologies help inform understanding of biodiversity. We detail example use cases to highlight how DNA sequencing is: resolving taxonomic issues; Increasing knowledge of marine biodiversity; helping understand how agriculture and biodiversity are critically linked; and playing an essential role in ecological studies. Together with examples of national biodiversity programmes, the use cases show where progress is being made but also highlight common challenges and opportunities for future enhancement of underlying technologies and services that connect molecular and wider biodiversity domains. Based on emerging themes, we propose key recommendations to guide future funding for biodiversity research: biodiversity and bioinformatic infrastructures need to collaborate closely and strategically; taxonomic efforts need to be aligned and harmonised across domains; metadata needs to be standardised and common data management approaches widely adopted; current approaches need to be scaled up dramatically to address the anticipated explosion of molecular data; bioinformatics support for biodiversity research needs to be enabled and sustained; training for end users of biodiversity research infrastructures needs to be prioritised; and community initiatives need to be proactive and focused on enabling solutions. For sequencing data to delive

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
EPIC3F1000Research, F1000Research, 10, pp. elixir-1238, ISSN: 2046-1402
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1449535610
Document Type :
Electronic Resource