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Online Indexing of All Life on Earth Begins

by Stephen Leahy

BROOKLIN, Canada - Free, authoritative and online: 1.8 million species.

That is the ultimate goal of the Encyclopedia of Life project, which put its first 30,000 species on the Internet this week. This ambitious global project will provide the details of every known species — habitat, range, life cycle, pictures, and more — and archive everything online so anyone can access this important information about life on Earth.0228 05

From sharks to mushrooms to bacteria, the Encyclopedia of Life will provide scientifically verified information that will satisfy both a grade school child’s curiosity or enable a university researcher — or amateur naturalist — to make a scientific breakthrough, says James Edward, new executive director of the Encyclopedia of Life (EOL) project headquartered in Washington, DC at the Smithsonian Institution.

Each species page has a built in content slider that allows you to select how much information you want to see on the page. And there is plenty of detail, including links to at least 1 million pages of digitized scientific information that is normally only available in the big 10 natural history museums located in the developed world.

“Anyone can access this for free no matter where they are,” Edward told IPS.

Anyone who can read English, that is. “We’re hoping to get translations into other languages,” he added.

In the near future, there will be regional editions of the EOL: EOL Colombia or EOL Netherlands, with all information in Spanish and Dutch and provided by local experts.

Unlike traditional encyclopedias, EOL will be interactive and continually updated. Indeed, it has the potential to become a powerful investigative tool on its own. If the public participates, the EOL could become a global species monitoring system to track responses to climate change.

Around the world, species’ habitats are altering dramatically, forcing birds to migrate sooner, or becoming too dry or too hot to support certain plants. There is no chance the scientific community can keep pace with the speed and breadth of these changes. The only possible way is through observations by non-scientists who can check the EOL to see if that frog they saw this morning is in its normal habitat or has shifted its range.

“If someone in Ecuador sees a frog they’ve never seen before, they can quickly check the EOL to see if it’s endemic or from neighboring countries. If not, then it may be a new species,” said James Hanken, director of Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology, and chair of the EOL Steering Committee.

So many species are going extinct before they can even be identified, but the EOL will make it much easier to identify them, Hanken told IPS.

“We can’t protect things (species/habitat) without knowing what is there,” he said.

In a few months’ time, species experts will be happy to receive information — pictures, videos, text — from the public about their observations. The EOL will have a form to complete which will be reviewed, checked, and if warranted, incorporated into the EOL.

Right now Edward, Hanken and others would like people to tell them what they think about the EOL as it currently stands. Suggestions and ideas are welcome about anything from the page structure to the font colors, says Edwards.

Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of the EOL is the notion that it is a macroscope — the opposite of the common microscope. As such, the EOL will offer the biggest picture yet of the Earth’s amazing biodiversity. It will make visible patterns previously unseen, illuminate relationships, and identify knowledge gaps.

It could map the distribution of human disease vectors, such as crows, mosquitoes, and the West Nile virus. Life spans of related species could be compared to understand what truly governs longevity. With the mysterious, ongoing loss of honey bee populations, the EOL could point the way to alternative pollinators.

It will hopefully revolutionize teaching and learning of the life sciences. And such a revolution is urgently needed.

Better understanding of biodiversity — the sum total of living, interacting species — is critical to the survival of humans, who too often ignore the vital services that other species provide. There is no oxygen for us to breathe without plants. No plants also means no food. Trees clean water and air, regulate temperature, and prevent flooding and much more. However, the world is in the midst of an extinction crisis with one species vanishing every three hours. And the rate is accelerating.

It will take a decade to complete the EOL and perhaps 40,000 to 50,000 existing species will have gone extinct before it’s complete. Up to 30 percent of all species on Earth are likely to vanish by 2050 due to unsustainable human activities, according to the 2006 Millennium Ecosystem Assessment.

Scientists do not know how many species are “enough” to keep ecosystems that we depend on functioning. Recent research reported by IPS last November shows that if a forest loses too many unique species, it can reduce the total number of plants in that forest by half.

It’s a sobering finding: some species are irreplaceable, but we don’t know what they are.

“We hope the EOL will spark a new generation of budding biologists and will help people develop a better appreciation of the natural world,” says Hanken.

© 2008 Inter Press Service

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10 Comments so far

  1. KEM PATRICK February 28th, 2008 11:51 am

    When all of humanity has finally managed to eradicate itself, will the satelite still work?

  2. namaste February 28th, 2008 12:35 pm

    Read “When soft rains come” by Ray Bradbury.

    It’s about an automated house valiantly protecting itself after a nuke war vaporizes its owners, onto the paint.

    The computers have no sensors for shutdown all done, no one is home, so they keep serving breakfast and doing the normal activities, somewhat diminished each day as supplies ebb away.

    With solar panels and usual fuel levels, many of the geo-stationary birds could last for dozens of years - although the antenna’s wouldn’t point as well and would eventually (when fuel is dry) lose the ability to find Earth (gravitation perturbations of moon push them around).

    After that, they’ll function relatively well for much longer, until electronics can no longer find fault tolerant replacement parts to swap, and gradually all die their natural deaths.

    Perhaps some flighty birds would even start “accidentally” beaming re-runs to attract the requisite alien visit to provide our planet’s eulogy. Jack Bauer will not be arriving “just in time” to disconnect the fuses of 20,000 nukes and save humankind …

  3. jungleboy February 28th, 2008 12:49 pm

    The ones they miss are the ones who are deemed insignificant? With ten thousand organisms in one square foot of forest soil I’m sure they are going to get them all. No machine can count that!

  4. mrpickwick February 28th, 2008 3:02 pm

    Too late, too late, quoth the raven.

  5. hazmat February 28th, 2008 3:15 pm

    the sooner it’s all inventoried, the sooner monsanto can patent it.

  6. bbr-001 February 28th, 2008 5:29 pm

    What species is Cheney? He’s intelligent enough but somehow not quite human.

  7. Gyro February 28th, 2008 7:50 pm

    Cool.

  8. rtdrury February 29th, 2008 4:48 am

    You can hook a cheap digital microscope up to your computer, squish a specimen under it, and the system will identify it for you by looking at the DNA, and if it represents something new, you could give it all kinds of other info, e.g. coordinates, photos, and it would add all that to the database. This kind of thing should be publicly funded. Capitalism just can’t keep up.

  9. Paul M February 29th, 2008 4:57 am

    It this connected to the Tree of Life (tolweb.org) at Arizona University?

  10. kelmer February 29th, 2008 11:00 am

    What species is Cheney? He’s intelligent enough but somehow not quite human.

    ***only humans with a supremacist mindset would say that. He is all too human.
    The most violent cruel acts have always been committed by humans. Cheney is an amateur compared to what some humans are capable of…and surprise! Some of the worst acts have been done in the name of science.

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