Las colecciones biológicas: Los tesoros escondidos de un país mega-diverso
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Las colecciones biológicas son verdaderos legados de información que necesitan ser apoyados, mantenidos y protegidos por el Estado e instituciones privadas (Hill et al., 2012; Stucky et al., 2014). No solamente son el sitio de referencia científica para el descubrimiento de nuevas especies, sino que son sitios de generación de conocimiento en diferentes ámbitos (Winker, 2004; Matsunanga et al., 2013).
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Segovia Salcedo C, Carrasco L, Acosta Buenaño N. Las colecciones biológicas: Los tesoros escondidos de un país mega-diverso. REMCB [Internet]. 15 de agosto de 2017 [citado 15 de octubre de 2024];36(1-2):83-8. Disponible en: https://remcb-puce.edu.ec/remcb/article/view/278
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Berents P, Hamer M y Chavan V. 2010. Towards demand driven publishing: approaches to the prioritization of digitization of natural history collections data. Biodiversity Informatics, 7(2):113-119.
Cook JA, Edwards SV, Lacey EA, Guralnick RP, Soltis PS, Soltis DE y Ickert-Bond S. 2014. Natural History Collections as Emerging Resources for Innovative Education. BioScience, 64(8):725-734
Drew J. 2011. The Role of Natural History Institutions and Bioinformatics in Conservation Biology. Conservation Biology, 25(6):1250-1252.
Edwards JL, Lane MA y Nielsen ES. 2000. Interoperability of biodiversity databases: biodiversity information on every desktop.Science, 289(5488), 2312-2314.
Graham CH. Ferrier S. Huettman F. Moritz C y Peterson AT.. 2004. New Developments in museum-based informatics and application in biodiversity analysis. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 19(9):497-502.
Hill A, Gularnick R, Smith A, Sallans A, Gillespie R, Denslow M, et al. 2012. The notes from nature tool for unlocking biodiversity records from museum records through citizen science. ZooKeys, 209:219-233.
Janken J. 2013. Biodiversity Online: Toward a Network Integrated Biocollections Alliance. Bioscience, 63(10):789-790.
Knight-Davis S, Bruns T y Tucker G. 2015. Big Things Have Small Beginnings: Curating a Large Natural History Collection–Processes and Lessons Learned. Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication, 3(2).
Krishtalka L y Humphrey PS. 2000. Can natural history museums capture the future?. BioScience, 50(7):611-617.
Lister AM y Climate Change Research group. 2011. Natural History Collections as source of long term datasets. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 26(4):153-154.
Matsunaga A, Thompson A, Figueiredo RJ, Germain-Aubrey CC, Collins M, Beaman RS y Fortes J. 2013. A computational-and storage-cloud for integration of biodiversity collections. En eScience (eScience), 2013 IEEE 9th International Conference on pp. 78-87.
Miller JT y Jolley-Rogers G. 2014. Correcting the disconnect between phylogenetics and biodiversity informatics. Zootaxa, 3754(2):195-200.
O’Connell AF, Gilbert AT y Hatfield JS. 2004. Contribution of natural history collection data to biodiversity assessment in national parks. Conservation biology, 18(5):1254-1261.
Powers KE, Prather A, Cook J, Woolley J, Bart HL, Monfils AK y Sierwald P. 2014. Revolutionizing the Use of Natural History Collections in Education. Science Education Review, 13(2):24-33.
Shaffer HB, Fisher RN y Davidson C. 1998. The role of natural history collections in documenting species declines. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 13(1):27-30.
Stucky BJ, Deck J, Conlin T, Ziemba L, Cellinese N y Guralnick R. 2014. The BiSciCol Triplifier: bringing biodiversity data to the Semantic Web. BMC bioinformatics, 15(1):257
Suárez L. 2014. ¿Cómo se explica tanta biodiversidad en el Ecuador? pp. 50-51 en: García, M., D. Parra P. y P. Mena V. 2013. El País de la Biodiversidad: Ecuador. Fundación Botánica de los Andes, Ministerio del Ambiente y Fundación EcoFondo. Quito.
Winker K. 2004. Natural history museums in a postbiodiversity era. BioScience, 54(5):455-459.
Tingley MW y Beissinger SR. 2009. Detecting range shifts from historical species occurrences: new perspectives on old data. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 24(11):625-633.
Tirira D. 2015. Mamíferos del Ecuador: Lista Actualizada de Especies del Ecuador.
Cook JA, Edwards SV, Lacey EA, Guralnick RP, Soltis PS, Soltis DE y Ickert-Bond S. 2014. Natural History Collections as Emerging Resources for Innovative Education. BioScience, 64(8):725-734
Drew J. 2011. The Role of Natural History Institutions and Bioinformatics in Conservation Biology. Conservation Biology, 25(6):1250-1252.
Edwards JL, Lane MA y Nielsen ES. 2000. Interoperability of biodiversity databases: biodiversity information on every desktop.Science, 289(5488), 2312-2314.
Graham CH. Ferrier S. Huettman F. Moritz C y Peterson AT.. 2004. New Developments in museum-based informatics and application in biodiversity analysis. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 19(9):497-502.
Hill A, Gularnick R, Smith A, Sallans A, Gillespie R, Denslow M, et al. 2012. The notes from nature tool for unlocking biodiversity records from museum records through citizen science. ZooKeys, 209:219-233.
Janken J. 2013. Biodiversity Online: Toward a Network Integrated Biocollections Alliance. Bioscience, 63(10):789-790.
Knight-Davis S, Bruns T y Tucker G. 2015. Big Things Have Small Beginnings: Curating a Large Natural History Collection–Processes and Lessons Learned. Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication, 3(2).
Krishtalka L y Humphrey PS. 2000. Can natural history museums capture the future?. BioScience, 50(7):611-617.
Lister AM y Climate Change Research group. 2011. Natural History Collections as source of long term datasets. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 26(4):153-154.
Matsunaga A, Thompson A, Figueiredo RJ, Germain-Aubrey CC, Collins M, Beaman RS y Fortes J. 2013. A computational-and storage-cloud for integration of biodiversity collections. En eScience (eScience), 2013 IEEE 9th International Conference on pp. 78-87.
Miller JT y Jolley-Rogers G. 2014. Correcting the disconnect between phylogenetics and biodiversity informatics. Zootaxa, 3754(2):195-200.
O’Connell AF, Gilbert AT y Hatfield JS. 2004. Contribution of natural history collection data to biodiversity assessment in national parks. Conservation biology, 18(5):1254-1261.
Powers KE, Prather A, Cook J, Woolley J, Bart HL, Monfils AK y Sierwald P. 2014. Revolutionizing the Use of Natural History Collections in Education. Science Education Review, 13(2):24-33.
Shaffer HB, Fisher RN y Davidson C. 1998. The role of natural history collections in documenting species declines. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 13(1):27-30.
Stucky BJ, Deck J, Conlin T, Ziemba L, Cellinese N y Guralnick R. 2014. The BiSciCol Triplifier: bringing biodiversity data to the Semantic Web. BMC bioinformatics, 15(1):257
Suárez L. 2014. ¿Cómo se explica tanta biodiversidad en el Ecuador? pp. 50-51 en: García, M., D. Parra P. y P. Mena V. 2013. El País de la Biodiversidad: Ecuador. Fundación Botánica de los Andes, Ministerio del Ambiente y Fundación EcoFondo. Quito.
Winker K. 2004. Natural history museums in a postbiodiversity era. BioScience, 54(5):455-459.
Tingley MW y Beissinger SR. 2009. Detecting range shifts from historical species occurrences: new perspectives on old data. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 24(11):625-633.
Tirira D. 2015. Mamíferos del Ecuador: Lista Actualizada de Especies del Ecuador.