Bio*Pedia is a repository of descriptions of organisms. Information entered here will be harvested by the Encyclopedia of Life. The material will be reviewed and if inappropriate or inaccurate, may not be included in EOL.
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Welcome to Bio*Pedia!
Bio*Pedia is a repository of descriptions of organisms and a partner of the Encyclopedia of Life (EOL). Descriptions added to Bio*Pedia will be harvested at regular intervals, and will appear on EOL species pages.1
Want to contribute a text description for an EOL species page now? Here are a few easy steps to get started:
Please register with Bio*Pedia or login if you are already registered (Bio*Pedia has a separate registration system from EOL).
If you are not registered yet, please fill in all fields in the registration
form. You will receive an e-mail with a registration confirmation link shortly. After you click this link, you can begin contributing to Bio*Pedia and EOL.
Type the scientific name of the species that you wish to add a description to (without author and year) into the search box, select and jump to the species name, and click on the "Add description" link in the upper left corner of the page. Type your description into the lower (yellow) box, choose the appropriate license, click "Save description", and your description will immediately appear in Bio*Pedia, which means that it is on the way to EOL!1
1Please note that your description will not appear immediately on EOL Species Pages. If submitted descriptions are deemed inappropriate or inaccurate, they may not be included in EOL.
Description of Eubacteria:
One of the three major domains of cellular life, the others being Archaebacteria (Archaea) and Eukaryotes. The Eubacteria are also referred to as Bacteria by some, but this term has an alternative meaning (all non-eukaryotic cellular life). Peptidoglycan cell walls, lipids are straight chain fatty acids linked to glycerol molecules by ester linkages, genome typically but not always as a single loop of DNA, RNA polymerases with smallish number of subunits. The most diverse and abundant of the non-nucleated cellular life forms.
A search that checks against common names and lexical variants.
Example: A search for "Pomatomus saltator" will check presence in the tree of "Pomatomus sallatrix", "Pomatomus saltator", or "Pomatomus saltatrix".
A search that checks against common names and lexical variants and homotypic variants.
Example: A search for "Pomatomus saltator" will check presence in the tree of "Cheilodipterus saltatrix", "Gasterosteus saltatrix", "Pomatomix saltatrix", "Pomatomus sallatrix", "Pomatomus saltator", "Pomatomus saltatrix", or "Temnodon saltator".