ZooKeys (Sep 2016)

On natural history collections, digitized and not: a response to Ferro and Flick

  • Derek S. Sikes,
  • Kyle Copas,
  • Tim Hirsch,
  • John T. Longino,
  • Dmitry Schigel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.618.9986
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 618
pp. 145 – 158

Abstract

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Ferro and Flick (2015) describe their efforts to estimate the distribution for a species of rove beetle via the study of specimens from entomological collections, and compare these results to digitally accessible open data. Their study provides an informed and accurate case study that contrasts targeted data capture with generalized public repositories of digital specimen data. However, we feel the conclusions on how global biodiversity data aggregation and publication work require clarification and correction of common misconceptions that we believe will interest those concerned with the future of natural history collections and taxonomy.