Entomological Collections Network Meeting, Indianapolis, IN 13 December 2009 Darwin Core Ratified in the Year of Darwin Gail E. Kampmeier Illinois Natural.

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Presentation transcript:

Entomological Collections Network Meeting, Indianapolis, IN 13 December 2009 Darwin Core Ratified in the Year of Darwin Gail E. Kampmeier Illinois Natural History Survey Institute of Natural Resource Sustainability University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

What is the Darwin Core (DwC)?  Standard for sharing information about species and biodiversity information  Based on taxa, their occurrence in nature as documented by observations, specimens, and samples, and related information  Includes a glossary of terms that provide reference definitions, examples, and commentaries, including how terms  are managed  can be extended for new purposes  can be used  Design Philosophy: minimize the barriers to adoption and to maximize reusability

Darwin Core Ratified 9 Oct 2009!  Consists of a  Vocabulary of terms that provide a framework for sharing biodiversity information  Policy governing maintenance  Decisions resulting from changes  History & mapping to other versions of terms  XML, text, & other schemas to show how it can be used

Who died & made you Darwin?  The Darwin Core Standard was developed by the Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG) community tdwg.org tdwg.org  Not-for-profit international scientific & educational association affiliated with the International Union of Biological Sciences  TDWG's original mission was to promote dissemination of the World's heritage of biological organisms - now done by GBIF GBIF  Now focus on development of standards & protocols for exchange of biodiversity data

Resemblance? John Wieczorek lead author of Darwin Core Standard Charles Darwin inspiration for Darwin Core Standard

Heritage  Standard has evolved over 8+ years  Originally a product of the Species Analyst project out of the University of Kansas  Terms were first used in MaNIS (Mammal Networked Information System) as Darwin Core 2 with DiGIR protocol (Distributed Generic Information Retrieval)  The DwC is based on standards developed by the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI) & is an extension of it (dc) for biodiversity information  DwC is part of a larger set of vocabularies & technical specifications under development or maintained by TDWG  Historical versions shaped database structure  "Classic" (1.2), or "Draft" (1.4) or "Archive" (GBIF)  Extensions for curatorial, geospatial, paleontology, & specimen interaction information (pollination ecology)

Hooray for Translation Tables!

 Interaction extension used by the pollination ecology community to describe specimen interactions not yet included (no consensus)  Entomological community needs to step up to ensure terms they need become part of this living standard Mature Extensions also in DwC

Darwin Core Terms

Term Definitions: Occurrence  Clicking on link in Comment takes you to the any community discussion about the term that is taking place OUTSIDE of the DwC Standard in Google Code

DwC Project Site  Link from Comment of term  Hosting the discussion & elaboration here in the wiki leaves the standard flexible  Issues can be raised & tracked here as they are dealt with

Issue Tracking  Find an error? Want to make a request? Add it to the queue

Details link gives History

Extensions to the DwC  Each term has a definition and commentaries that are meant to promote the consistent use of the terms across applications and disciplines.  Although the data types and constraints are not provided in the term definitions, recommendations are made about how to restrict the values where appropriate.  Discuss, refine, expand, or translate the definitions and examples through links in the Comments attribute of each term to the Google Code wiki.  Using Google Code to document, allows the standard to adapt to new purposes without disrupting existing applications.  A clear separation between the terms defined in this standard and applications that make use of them is intentional.  Before proposing a new term, consider the existing terms in this and other compatible standards to determine if the new concept can be accommodated by a simple revision of the description and comments for an existing term, without losing the existing meaning of that term (see Term Change Policy) Term Change PolicyTerm Change Policy

So how do I get from DwC terms … to sharing my data with the world? See about the GBIF data portal:

Choosing a protocol  May depend on the extent of your IT support  Via web services - data transfer long  BioCASE - Biological Collection Access Services  DiGIR - Distributed Generic Information Retrieval  TAPIR - TDWG Access Protocol for Information Retrieval  Via zipped text archives - data transfer short  Darwin Core Archives (GBIF)  Tab-separated values with appropriate headers (DiscoverLife.org)  GBIF's IPT (Integrated Publishing Toolkit)  XML - Guide includes Guide  Simple Darwin Core Schema  Additional resources (including Excel spreadsheet!) 

Resources:  Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG) tdwg.org tdwg.org  Darwin Core  DwC Documentation  Participate through tdwg-content list content content content  TDWG Standards  TDWG 2009 presentations in Montpellier, France  Proceedings of TDWG  DwC Tools & Applications  DiGIR  TAPIR  Discover Life  GBIF IPT (Integrated Publishing Toolkit)