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Autores principales: Kunkel, David M, Long-Fox, Brooke L, Pittman, Cameron, Portmann, Julia, Sheik, Matthew, Bates, John M, Bentley, Andrew, Contreras, Dori L, Ellwood, Elizabeth R, Lomas, Michael W, Monfils, Anna K, Moser, William E, Nelson, Gil, Poo, Sinlan, Thiers, Barbara, Watkins-Colwell, Gregory J, Webster, Michael S, Zimkus, Breda M, Pandey, Jyotsna L
Formato: Artículo científico
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: Bioscience 2026
Acceso en línea:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41503403/
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author Kunkel, David M
Long-Fox, Brooke L
Pittman, Cameron
Portmann, Julia
Sheik, Matthew
Bates, John M
Bentley, Andrew
Contreras, Dori L
Ellwood, Elizabeth R
Lomas, Michael W
Monfils, Anna K
Moser, William E
Nelson, Gil
Poo, Sinlan
Thiers, Barbara
Watkins-Colwell, Gregory J
Webster, Michael S
Zimkus, Breda M
Pandey, Jyotsna L
author_facet Kunkel, David M
Long-Fox, Brooke L
Pittman, Cameron
Portmann, Julia
Sheik, Matthew
Bates, John M
Bentley, Andrew
Contreras, Dori L
Ellwood, Elizabeth R
Lomas, Michael W
Monfils, Anna K
Moser, William E
Nelson, Gil
Poo, Sinlan
Thiers, Barbara
Watkins-Colwell, Gregory J
Webster, Michael S
Zimkus, Breda M
Pandey, Jyotsna L
Kunkel, David M
Long-Fox, Brooke L
Pittman, Cameron
Portmann, Julia
Sheik, Matthew
Bates, John M
Bentley, Andrew
Contreras, Dori L
Ellwood, Elizabeth R
Lomas, Michael W
Monfils, Anna K
Moser, William E
Nelson, Gil
Poo, Sinlan
Thiers, Barbara
Watkins-Colwell, Gregory J
Webster, Michael S
Zimkus, Breda M
Pandey, Jyotsna L
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Integrating biological and environmental data to solve key scientific and societal challenges. Kunkel, David M Long-Fox, Brooke L Pittman, Cameron Portmann, Julia Sheik, Matthew Bates, John M Bentley, Andrew Contreras, Dori L Ellwood, Elizabeth R Lomas, Michael W Monfils, Anna K Moser, William E Nelson, Gil Poo, Sinlan Thiers, Barbara Watkins-Colwell, Gregory J Webster, Michael S Zimkus, Breda M Pandey, Jyotsna L Biodiversity collections in the United States hold over a billion specimens and are essential to understanding the history of life on Earth, as well as patterns of biodiversity in response to environmental change. Each specimen is linked by metadata to an organism's name and the place and time of its collection. Extensive data have been collected on Earth's geology, hydrology, climate, and organisms-past and present-but the data remain largely fragmented. We report in the present article on community discussions to develop a roadmap and identify action items for the Building an Integrated, Open, Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (BIOFAIR) Data Network, directly linking the various types of biological and environmental data. The roadmap is organized into five themes: stocktaking and gap analysis, technological capacity building, best practices, education and training, and community building. Together, these themes chart a path from initial resource inventories and skill building to infrastructure development, cross‑disciplinary collaboration, and the establishment of FAIR‑compliant workflows and governance.
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language en
publishDate 2026
publisher Bioscience
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Integrating biological and environmental data to solve key scientific and societal challenges.
Kunkel, David M
Long-Fox, Brooke L
Pittman, Cameron
Portmann, Julia
Sheik, Matthew
Bates, John M
Bentley, Andrew
Contreras, Dori L
Ellwood, Elizabeth R
Lomas, Michael W
Monfils, Anna K
Moser, William E
Nelson, Gil
Poo, Sinlan
Thiers, Barbara
Watkins-Colwell, Gregory J
Webster, Michael S
Zimkus, Breda M
Pandey, Jyotsna L
Integrating biological and environmental data to solve key scientific and societal challenges. Kunkel, David M Long-Fox, Brooke L Pittman, Cameron Portmann, Julia Sheik, Matthew Bates, John M Bentley, Andrew Contreras, Dori L Ellwood, Elizabeth R Lomas, Michael W Monfils, Anna K Moser, William E Nelson, Gil Poo, Sinlan Thiers, Barbara Watkins-Colwell, Gregory J Webster, Michael S Zimkus, Breda M Pandey, Jyotsna L Biodiversity collections in the United States hold over a billion specimens and are essential to understanding the history of life on Earth, as well as patterns of biodiversity in response to environmental change. Each specimen is linked by metadata to an organism's name and the place and time of its collection. Extensive data have been collected on Earth's geology, hydrology, climate, and organisms-past and present-but the data remain largely fragmented. We report in the present article on community discussions to develop a roadmap and identify action items for the Building an Integrated, Open, Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (BIOFAIR) Data Network, directly linking the various types of biological and environmental data. The roadmap is organized into five themes: stocktaking and gap analysis, technological capacity building, best practices, education and training, and community building. Together, these themes chart a path from initial resource inventories and skill building to infrastructure development, cross‑disciplinary collaboration, and the establishment of FAIR‑compliant workflows and governance.
title Integrating biological and environmental data to solve key scientific and societal challenges.
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41503403/