Partnerinstitutionen


Cornerstone Institutions

 

This project brings together several of the world’s leading natural history institutions, botanical gardens, and libraries, including:


Biodiversity Heritage Library
(http://biodiversitylibrary.org/)

The Field Museum of Natural History
(http://www.fieldmuseum.org/)

Harvard University
(http://www.mcz.harvard.edu/)

Marine Biological Laboratory
(http://www.mbl.edu/)

Missouri Botanical Garden
(http://www.mobot.org/)

Smithsonian Institution
(http://www.si.edu/)


Other institutions from across the United States and around the world have been invited as collaborators, and links have already been established with many relevant efforts already underway.

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Component Groups

 

EOL uses the phrase “component groups” to refer to the five subprojects that together make up the Encyclopedia of Life. These are the Species Sites Group, the Biodiversity Informatics Group, the Scanning and Digitization Group, the Education and Outreach Group, and the Biodiversity Synthesis Group.

 

The Species Sites Group works with the scientific community and other contributors to bring together the content needed for the species pages and to authenticate it. The information on the species pages is derived from a large number of different data providers around the globe. The group recruits diverse data providers and works with the scientific community to engage experts who act as “curators” to ensure information on the species pages is correct and current. In addition, the group is implementing a robust intellectual property regime that ensures open access to Encyclopedia materials. Finally, the team is working to develop specialized portals for different audiences.

 

The Biodiversity Informatics Group is creating the software to establish a single portal to reach information on all 1.8 million known species scattered in diverse websites all over the world. The infrastructure is seamlessly aggregating data from thousands of sites into species pages in the Encyclopedia using novel informatics tools to capture, organize, and reshape knowledge about biodiversity. The group collaborates with data providers, and then the information is indexed and recombined for expert and non-expert users alike using aggregation technology to bring together different data elements from remote sites. In 2008 a WorkBench suite of tools and services will be deployed to index, organize, and associate data elements or create new elements.

 

The Scanning and Digitization Group is led by the Biodiversity Heritage Library, a consortium of 10 natural history and botanical libraries, who are digitizing the published literature of biodiversity held in their respective collections and making it available as part of an open biodiversity commons. This digitized literature is of value to a wide range of scientists as well as many others. For example, individuals in developing countries and citizen scientists who lack affiliation with major research institutions will now be able to search, read, download, and print literature that was previously unavailable to them. Artists can use the detailed illustrations in many taxonomic works as motifs or design concepts in their work, whether on canvas, paper, or digitally. Educators guiding students in how to do biological research will have a wealth of examples to incorporate into lesson plans and assignments. The BHL Portal, which is linked to the EOL species pages, is available at http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/ .

 

The overall goals of the Education and Outreach Group are to insure widespread awareness of the EOL and to explore and promote new and exciting uses of this extraordinary resource in diverse settings globally. To achieve this goal, the Education and Outreach Group strives to make EOL relevant, usable and interesting to a broad range of international audiences. In addition to providing a useful resource about biodiversity for educators, citizen scientists, and others, in the future Education and Outreach will encourage participation from interested parties by providing them tools to organize and serve their own observations, media, and data about the species they study.

 

The Biodiversity Synthesis Group (BioSynC) aims to find new ways in which scientists, conservationists, academics, and educators can take advantage of the rich information being provided by the EOL. It supports the growth and use of the EOL by facilitating cross-disciplinary involvement of the scientific and academic community and by contributing to educational and conservation uses of the EOL. There are many pressing questions yet to be answered in all fields of biology. Human population growth, global climate change, and other environmental crises heighten the urgency with which we must discover, understand, and preserve biodiversity. To help answer these questions, BioSynC supports working group meetings to explore integrative topics in biodiversity, such as taxonomy, biogeography, phylogenetics, and bioinformatics.

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EOL Steering Committee

 

The Steering Committee consists of senior figures from the cornerstone institutions and liaisons from EOL’s financial sponsors. It provides hands-on guidance and serves as major forum for coordination of the various facets of the project. The Board is accountable for EOL’s success and meeting performance metrics

 

James Hanken, Director (Chairman)

Museum of Comparative Zoology

Harvard University

Cambridge, MA

 

Jesse H. Ausubel, Director

Program for the Human Environment

The Rockefeller University

New York, NY

 

Gary G. Borisy, Director & Chief Executive Officer

Marine Biological Laboratory

Woods Hole, MA

 

Graham Higley, Head of Library and Information Services

Natural History Museum

London, England

[Biodiversity Heritage Library, Chairman]

 

Arthur Sussman, Vice President

John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Chicago, IL

 

John W. McCarter, Jr., President & Chief Executive Officer

The Field Museum of Natural History

Chicago, IL

 

Peter H. Raven, Director

Missouri Botanical Garden

St. Louis, MO

 

Cristián Samper, Director

National Museum of Natural History

Washington, DC

 

James L. Edwards, Executive Director

Encyclopedia of Life

National Museum of Natural History

Smithsonian Institution

Washington, DC

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Institutional Council

 

The Institutional Council engages the wider international and scientific communities by providing representation for numerous institutions and programs that are crucial partners committed to implementing the EOL.  The Council works to bring a wider perspective for and involvement in the EOL, to identify individuals and programs that should be involved in the project, and to engage additional funding and other resources.

 

John McCarter (Chair)

The Field Museum of Natural History

 

American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS)

Represented by: Richard O'Grady (Executive Director); Paula Mabee (Professor, Department of Biology, University of South Dakota)

 

American Museum of Natural History (AMNH)

Represented by: Michael J. Novacek (Senior VP and Provost of Science)

 

ARKive

Represented by: Richard Edwards (Director)

 

Atlas of Living Australia (ALA)

Represented by: Joanne Daly

 

Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI)

Represented by: Sara Oldfield (Secretary General)

 

Catalogue of Life Partnership

Represented by: Frank Bisby (Director, Species 2000)

 

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Represented by: Le Kang (Director-General, Bureau of Life Sciences and Biotechnology)

 

Comision Nacional de Biodiversidad (CONABIO-Mexico)

Represented by: Ana Luisa Guzman (Executive Secretary)

 

Consortium of European Taxonomic Facilities (CETAF)

Represented by: Stefan Claesson (Chair)

 

Cornell Lab of Ornithology

Represented by: John Fitzpatrick (Director)

 

FishBase

Represented by: Rainer Froese

 

Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF)

Represented by: David Penman (Chair of the Governing Board)

 

Instituto de Investigacionde Recursos Biologicos Alexander Von Humboldt

Represented by: Fernando Gast H. (Director General)

 

Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad (INBio-Costa Rica)

Represented by: Rodrigo Gamez Lobo (President)

 

Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle (Paris)

Represented by: Simon Tillier (Professor, EDIT)

 

Natural History Museum (London)

Represented by: Richard Lane (Director of Science)

 

Naturalis Museum

Represented by: (To Be Announced).

 

NatureServe

Represented by: Leslie Honey (Vice President of Conservation Services)

 

New York Botanical Garden

Represented by: Barbara Thiers (Director of the Herbarium)

 

Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS)

Represented by: Mark J. Costello (Chair)

 

Royal Botanical Gardens Kew

Represented by: Eimear Nic Lughadha (Head of Science Policy and Co-ordination)

 

Sapling Foundation (TED)

Represented by: Chris Anderson

 

South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI)

Represented by: Gideon Smith (Chief Director, Research and Scientific Services)

 

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre

Represented by: Jon Hutton (Director)

 

Wikimedia Foundation

Represented by: Erik Moeller (Executive Secretary)

 

World Conservation Union (IUCN)

Represented by: Simon Stuart (IUCN's Species Senior Scientist)

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Distinguished Advisory Board

 

The Distinguished Advisory Board is made up of accomplished individuals from within and outside the biodiversity community around the world. The Board helps develop and advocate for the EOL vision, and provides high-level, expert guidance.

 

E.O. Wilson (Honorary Chair)

Harvard University

Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

 

Gary Borisy (Chair)

Marine Biological Laboratory

Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA

 

Rita Colwell

Canon US Life Sciences

College Park, Maryland, USA

 

Sylvia Earle

National Geographic

Oakland, California, USA

 

Madhav Gadgil

Indian Academy of Science

Bangalore, India

 

Charles Godfray

Oxford University

Oxford, United Kingdom

 

Calestous Juma

Science, Technology and Globalization Project; Harvard University

Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

 

Lawrence Lessig

Stanford University Law School

Stanford, California, USA

 

Lord Robert May

Oxford University

Oxford, United Kingdom

 

Jose Sarukhan

National University of Mexico

Mexico City, Mexico

 

Larry Smarr

University of California San Diego

La Jolla, California, USA

 

Klaus Toepfer

United Nations Environment Programme

Nairobi, Kenya

 

Marvalee Wake

University of California

Berkeley, California

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