Commentary on "Preliminary Species Hypotheses" in Entomological Taxonomy: A Global Data and FAIR Infrastructure Perspective

What if early taxonomic findings were treated like preprints, open to iterative improvement or managed with practices from the open-source community, such as Git branching, merging and patch management? Prompted by Buckley's article Charting a Future for Entomological Taxonomy in New Zealan...

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Main Author: Sharif Islam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2025-02-01
Series:Biodiversity Data Journal
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Online Access:https://bdj.pensoft.net/article/141562/download/pdf/
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author Sharif Islam
author_facet Sharif Islam
author_sort Sharif Islam
collection DOAJ
description What if early taxonomic findings were treated like preprints, open to iterative improvement or managed with practices from the open-source community, such as Git branching, merging and patch management? Prompted by Buckley's article Charting a Future for Entomological Taxonomy in New Zealand (2024), this commentary explores these possibilities in the context of biodiversity informatics. In response to the need for rapid, scalable biodiversity monitoring, Buckley introduces preliminary species hypotheses (PSH) as a bridge between quick identification tools and the rigorous Linnaean system, leveraging DNA barcoding and AI-assisted image recognition to produce provisional classifications that can later be validated. Expanding on Buckley’s framework, this commentary emphasises the critical role of data linking, versioning and integration to support evolving taxonomic data. Borrowing from software and open-source practices, I explore the idea of managing PSH with an infrastructure that treats each taxonomic update as a versioned "commit", which can be tracked, refined and integrated over time. Drawing insights from FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) principles and Digital Extended Specimens, I identify infrastructure requirements for PSH, including robust data standards, persistent identifiers and interoperability to support global biodiversity repositories. Additionally, Taxonomic Data Objects offer a model for dynamically integrating PSH into adaptable taxonomies that can evolve with new data and tools. By positioning PSH within an open, infrastructure-focused framework, this commentary advocates for scalable, hypothesis-driven biodiversity data that meets modern conservation needs, bridging traditional and emerging practices in taxonomy.
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spelling doaj-art-62bd495019494708bb024d0e2cff27242025-02-12T08:31:39ZengPensoft PublishersBiodiversity Data Journal1314-28282025-02-011311410.3897/BDJ.13.e141562141562Commentary on "Preliminary Species Hypotheses" in Entomological Taxonomy: A Global Data and FAIR Infrastructure PerspectiveSharif Islam0DiSSCoWhat if early taxonomic findings were treated like preprints, open to iterative improvement or managed with practices from the open-source community, such as Git branching, merging and patch management? Prompted by Buckley's article Charting a Future for Entomological Taxonomy in New Zealand (2024), this commentary explores these possibilities in the context of biodiversity informatics. In response to the need for rapid, scalable biodiversity monitoring, Buckley introduces preliminary species hypotheses (PSH) as a bridge between quick identification tools and the rigorous Linnaean system, leveraging DNA barcoding and AI-assisted image recognition to produce provisional classifications that can later be validated. Expanding on Buckley’s framework, this commentary emphasises the critical role of data linking, versioning and integration to support evolving taxonomic data. Borrowing from software and open-source practices, I explore the idea of managing PSH with an infrastructure that treats each taxonomic update as a versioned "commit", which can be tracked, refined and integrated over time. Drawing insights from FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) principles and Digital Extended Specimens, I identify infrastructure requirements for PSH, including robust data standards, persistent identifiers and interoperability to support global biodiversity repositories. Additionally, Taxonomic Data Objects offer a model for dynamically integrating PSH into adaptable taxonomies that can evolve with new data and tools. By positioning PSH within an open, infrastructure-focused framework, this commentary advocates for scalable, hypothesis-driven biodiversity data that meets modern conservation needs, bridging traditional and emerging practices in taxonomy.https://bdj.pensoft.net/article/141562/download/pdf/taxonomyspeciesinteroperabilityFAIRdata in
spellingShingle Sharif Islam
Commentary on "Preliminary Species Hypotheses" in Entomological Taxonomy: A Global Data and FAIR Infrastructure Perspective
Biodiversity Data Journal
taxonomy
species
interoperability
FAIR
data in
title Commentary on "Preliminary Species Hypotheses" in Entomological Taxonomy: A Global Data and FAIR Infrastructure Perspective
title_full Commentary on "Preliminary Species Hypotheses" in Entomological Taxonomy: A Global Data and FAIR Infrastructure Perspective
title_fullStr Commentary on "Preliminary Species Hypotheses" in Entomological Taxonomy: A Global Data and FAIR Infrastructure Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Commentary on "Preliminary Species Hypotheses" in Entomological Taxonomy: A Global Data and FAIR Infrastructure Perspective
title_short Commentary on "Preliminary Species Hypotheses" in Entomological Taxonomy: A Global Data and FAIR Infrastructure Perspective
title_sort commentary on quot preliminary species hypotheses quot in entomological taxonomy a global data and fair infrastructure perspective
topic taxonomy
species
interoperability
FAIR
data in
url https://bdj.pensoft.net/article/141562/download/pdf/
work_keys_str_mv AT sharifislam commentaryonquotpreliminaryspecieshypothesesquotinentomologicaltaxonomyaglobaldataandfairinfrastructureperspective