Bajona
'Is the Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) the comprehensive solution to sharing and linking biological data by organism name?'; Bajona, L.; Kennedy, M. - Canada
To
share and integrate biological data the organism names must be
comprehensive. Beyond the frequent human error introduction of mixed
cases and typos, there is the more recent common occurrence of multiple
names for the same organism. A dataset may refer to a once valid old
name that has since been updated by the taxonomic experts and may also
have a separate entry for the new currently valid name. Users accessing
the data may not be aware of the multiple names thus may only obtain a
subset of the data they were looking for and likely need. Linking with
multiple data sets only increases the chances of missing relevant data.
Sharing biological data over the web necessitates a decision on
standardization of organism names. As the result of work being done for
DFO Maritimes' datasets, this presentation addresses the issues one may
encounter when linking data by organism names, the results of using the
Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) to standardize organism
names and a discussion regarding its use as an international standard
for internet sharing and linking of biological data.

