Towards a global list of accepted species VI: The Catalogue of Life checklist

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Towards a global list of accepted species VI : The Catalogue of Life checklist. / Hobern, Donald; Barik, Saroj K.; Christidis, Les; Garnett, Stephen T.; Kirk, Paul; Orrell, Thomas M.; Pape, Thomas; Pyle, Richard L.; Thiele, Kevin R.; Zachos, Frank E.; Bánki, Olaf.

In: Organisms Diversity & Evolution, Vol. 21, No. 4, 2021, p. 677-690.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hobern, D, Barik, SK, Christidis, L, Garnett, ST, Kirk, P, Orrell, TM, Pape, T, Pyle, RL, Thiele, KR, Zachos, FE & Bánki, O 2021, 'Towards a global list of accepted species VI: The Catalogue of Life checklist', Organisms Diversity & Evolution, vol. 21, no. 4, pp. 677-690. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13127-021-00516-w

APA

Hobern, D., Barik, S. K., Christidis, L., Garnett, S. T., Kirk, P., Orrell, T. M., Pape, T., Pyle, R. L., Thiele, K. R., Zachos, F. E., & Bánki, O. (2021). Towards a global list of accepted species VI: The Catalogue of Life checklist. Organisms Diversity & Evolution, 21(4), 677-690. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13127-021-00516-w

Vancouver

Hobern D, Barik SK, Christidis L, Garnett ST, Kirk P, Orrell TM et al. Towards a global list of accepted species VI: The Catalogue of Life checklist. Organisms Diversity & Evolution. 2021;21(4):677-690. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13127-021-00516-w

Author

Hobern, Donald ; Barik, Saroj K. ; Christidis, Les ; Garnett, Stephen T. ; Kirk, Paul ; Orrell, Thomas M. ; Pape, Thomas ; Pyle, Richard L. ; Thiele, Kevin R. ; Zachos, Frank E. ; Bánki, Olaf. / Towards a global list of accepted species VI : The Catalogue of Life checklist. In: Organisms Diversity & Evolution. 2021 ; Vol. 21, No. 4. pp. 677-690.

Bibtex

@article{b17aca812f5f4c9e98253df6c255f596,
title = "Towards a global list of accepted species VI: The Catalogue of Life checklist",
abstract = "Despite the important role that species names play in multiple fields, there is no globally complete list of known and described species. This lack is a result simultaneously of the complexity of planetary biodiversity, the long history of naming species in publications from all over the world, the small number of taxonomists working on many important groups, the rapid and dynamic change in knowledge for a few well-studied groups, and the limited incentives for researchers to curate such lists. Recent papers have proposed that a more formal governance mechanism is needed to assist with the translation of taxonomic knowledge to user communities. The recommendation is for the taxonomic community to assist user groups by maintaining reviewed lists that reflect as far as possible consensus among practising taxonomists and incorporating new insights and understanding as these become widely accepted within the relevant taxonomic community. The Catalogue of Life (COL) is the most significant international partnership working to deliver a list of all species by engaging a broad network of taxonomists and databases to contribute expert-curated lists for different taxonomic groups. COL, which included 1,908,823 species as of May 2021, has great experience with developing such a list across all taxonomic groups and has been modernising its processes and tools since 2017 to reflect best practice in management of large digital information assets. This paper explores the alignment between the current state and directions of COL and the initiative to improve the governance of species lists.",
author = "Donald Hobern and Barik, {Saroj K.} and Les Christidis and Garnett, {Stephen T.} and Paul Kirk and Orrell, {Thomas M.} and Thomas Pape and Pyle, {Richard L.} and Thiele, {Kevin R.} and Zachos, {Frank E.} and Olaf B{\'a}nki",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1007/s13127-021-00516-w",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "677--690",
journal = "Organisms Diversity & Evolution",
issn = "1439-6092",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Towards a global list of accepted species VI

T2 - The Catalogue of Life checklist

AU - Hobern, Donald

AU - Barik, Saroj K.

AU - Christidis, Les

AU - Garnett, Stephen T.

AU - Kirk, Paul

AU - Orrell, Thomas M.

AU - Pape, Thomas

AU - Pyle, Richard L.

AU - Thiele, Kevin R.

AU - Zachos, Frank E.

AU - Bánki, Olaf

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Despite the important role that species names play in multiple fields, there is no globally complete list of known and described species. This lack is a result simultaneously of the complexity of planetary biodiversity, the long history of naming species in publications from all over the world, the small number of taxonomists working on many important groups, the rapid and dynamic change in knowledge for a few well-studied groups, and the limited incentives for researchers to curate such lists. Recent papers have proposed that a more formal governance mechanism is needed to assist with the translation of taxonomic knowledge to user communities. The recommendation is for the taxonomic community to assist user groups by maintaining reviewed lists that reflect as far as possible consensus among practising taxonomists and incorporating new insights and understanding as these become widely accepted within the relevant taxonomic community. The Catalogue of Life (COL) is the most significant international partnership working to deliver a list of all species by engaging a broad network of taxonomists and databases to contribute expert-curated lists for different taxonomic groups. COL, which included 1,908,823 species as of May 2021, has great experience with developing such a list across all taxonomic groups and has been modernising its processes and tools since 2017 to reflect best practice in management of large digital information assets. This paper explores the alignment between the current state and directions of COL and the initiative to improve the governance of species lists.

AB - Despite the important role that species names play in multiple fields, there is no globally complete list of known and described species. This lack is a result simultaneously of the complexity of planetary biodiversity, the long history of naming species in publications from all over the world, the small number of taxonomists working on many important groups, the rapid and dynamic change in knowledge for a few well-studied groups, and the limited incentives for researchers to curate such lists. Recent papers have proposed that a more formal governance mechanism is needed to assist with the translation of taxonomic knowledge to user communities. The recommendation is for the taxonomic community to assist user groups by maintaining reviewed lists that reflect as far as possible consensus among practising taxonomists and incorporating new insights and understanding as these become widely accepted within the relevant taxonomic community. The Catalogue of Life (COL) is the most significant international partnership working to deliver a list of all species by engaging a broad network of taxonomists and databases to contribute expert-curated lists for different taxonomic groups. COL, which included 1,908,823 species as of May 2021, has great experience with developing such a list across all taxonomic groups and has been modernising its processes and tools since 2017 to reflect best practice in management of large digital information assets. This paper explores the alignment between the current state and directions of COL and the initiative to improve the governance of species lists.

U2 - 10.1007/s13127-021-00516-w

DO - 10.1007/s13127-021-00516-w

M3 - Journal article

VL - 21

SP - 677

EP - 690

JO - Organisms Diversity & Evolution

JF - Organisms Diversity & Evolution

SN - 1439-6092

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 345333478