Jeremy Miller 1,2 , Donat Agosti 2,3 , Guido Sautter 2 , Terry Catapano 2,4 , David King 5 , Serrano Pereira 1 , Rutger Vos 1 , Soraya Sierra 1 Unlocking the Legacy The Untapped Value of Data in Taxonomic Literature 1. Naturalis Biodiveristy Center, Leiden, Netherlands; 2. Plazi, Zinggstrasse 16, Bern, Switzerland; 3. Naturhistorisches Museum, Bern, Switzerland; 4. Columbia University, New York, United States of America; 5. The Open University, Milton Keynes, United Kingdom Report from the pro-iBiosphere Spider Pilot and data visualization hackathon
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Unlocking the Legacy: The untapped value of data in taxonomic literature #pibmei
Unlocking the Legacy: The untapped value of data in taxonomic literature Jeremy Miller, Donat Agosti, Guido Sautter Terry Catapano, David King, Serrano Pereira, Rutger Vos, Soraya Sierra pro-iBiosphere final conference, 12 June 2014, Bouchart Castle, Meise, Belgium
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Jeremy Miller1,2, Donat Agosti2,3, Guido Sautter2, Terry Catapano2,4, David King5, Serrano Pereira1, Rutger Vos1, Soraya Sierra1
Unlocking the LegacyThe Untapped Value of Data in Taxonomic Literature
1. Naturalis Biodiveristy Center, Leiden, Netherlands; 2. Plazi, Zinggstrasse 16, Bern, Switzerland; 3. Naturhistorisches Museum, Bern, Switzerland; 4. Columbia University, New York, United States of America; 5. The Open University, Milton Keynes, United Kingdom
Report from the pro-iBiosphere Spider Pilot and data visualization hackathon
Records: 230,000,000Species: 165,000
Species occurrence data in GBIF: Animals
GBIF Records Species in GBIF
Plants
Birds
Hymenoptera
Spiders
Other
Plants
BirdsHymenoptera
Spiders
animalsOtheranimals
% D
escr
ibed
spec
ies i
n GB
IF
Species occurrence data in GBIF
Moritz, C., K.S. Richardson, S. Ferrier, G.B. Monteith, J. Stanisic, S.E. Williams, T. Whiffin. 2001. Biogeographical concordance and efficiency of taxon indicators for establishing conservation priority in a tropical rainforest biota. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London, Series B 268: 1875-1881.
Insects
Snails and Insects•strong predictors of conservation priorities for vertebrates, but not vice versa•have finer-scale distribution patterns and higher local endemicity than vertebrates and plants