Parasitology, Harold W. Manter Laboratory of

 

Date of this Version

2009

Document Type

Article

Citation

BMC Research Notes (2009) 2: 53

doi: 10.1186/1756-0500-2-53

Comments

Copyright 2009,the authors. Open access material

License: CC BY 2.0

Abstract

Background

A large part of our knowledge on the world's species is recorded in the corpus of biodiversity literature with well over hundred million pages, and is represented in natural history collections estimated at 2–3 billion specimens. But this body of knowledge is almost entirely in paper-print form and is not directly accessible through the Internet. For the digitization of this literature, new territories have to be chartered in the fields of technical, legal and social issues that presently impede its advance. The taxonomic literature seems especially destined for such a transformation.

Discussion

Plazi was founded as an association with the primary goal of transforming both the printed and, more recently, "born-digital" taxonomic literature into semantically enabled, enhanced documents. This includes the creation of a test body of literature, an XML schema modeling its logic content (TaxonX), the development of a mark-up editor (GoldenGATE) allowing also the enhancement of documents with links to external resources via Life Science Identifiers (LSID), a repository for publications and issuance of bibliographic identifiers, a dedicated server to serve the marked up content (the Plazi Search and Retrieval Server, SRS) and semantic tools to mine information. Plazi's workflow is designed to respect copyright protection and achieves extraction by observing exceptions and limitations existent in international copyright law.

Conclusion

The information found in Plazi's databases–taxonomic treatments as well as the metadata of the publications–are in the public domain and can therefore be used for further scientific research without any restriction, whether or not contained in copyrighted publications.

Included in

Parasitology Commons

Share

COinS