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Biodiversity informatics: automated approaches for documenting global biodiversity patterns and processes
Guralnick, R.; Hill, A. (2009). Biodiversity informatics: automated approaches for documenting global biodiversity patterns and processes. Bioinformatics 25(4): 421-428. https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btn659
In: Bioinformatics. OXFORD UNIV PRESS. ISSN 1367-4803; e-ISSN 1460-2059, more
Peer reviewed article  

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  • Guralnick, R.
  • Hill, A.

Abstract
    Data about biodiversity have been scattered in different formats in natural history collections, survey reports and the literature. A central challenge for the biodiversity informatics community is to provide the means to share and rapidly synthesize these data and the knowledge they provide us to build an easily accessible, unified global map of biodiversity. Such a map would provide raw and summary data and information on biodiversity and its change across the world at multiple scales.We discuss a series of steps required to create a unified global map of biodiversity. These steps include: building biodiversity repositories; creating scalable species distribution maps; creating flexible, user-programmable pipelines which enable biodiversity assessment; and integrating phylogenetic approaches into biodiversity assessment. We show two case studies that combine phyloinformatic and biodiversity informatic approaches to document large scale biodiversity patterns. The first case study uses data available from the Barcode of Life initiative in order to make species conservation assessment of North American birds taking into account evolutionary uniqueness. The second case study uses full genomes of influenza A available from Genbank to provide an auto-updating documentation of the evolution and geographic spread of these viruses.

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