How to Become a FishBase Collaborator... and Why
The chapters of this document are authored by FishBase staff and collaborators |
A large project such as that which led to FishBase generates enough credit to share among project collaborators, and FishBase was designed to make explicit the role played by each collaborator.
For example, the chapters of this document are authored by the FishBase staff members and collaborators who have worked with the corresponding tables, data and/or concepts. References to each work from which information was extracted are given in the database, and the names of collaborators are attached to all the records they provided or corrected.
Moreover, three explicit procedures exist in FishBase to give credit to collaborators:
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Colleagues |
Furthermore, all collaborators’ areas of expertise, affiliations, contact address and photo (if supplied) are entered in a COLLABORATORS table, enabling FishBase users to contact directly the experts behind tables and their entries.
In addition to the above, we are working on a concept of Coordinators for certain areas such as taxonomic families (see Box 1), ecosystem or countries (see Box 7), and special topics such as relative brain size or swimming mode. Coordinators will have their name shown in the headers of the respective tables and printouts, e.g., ‘Coordinated by _____.’ We are still exploring this concept and invite your comments.
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Box 1. An offer to taxonomists.
Keeping track of the status of over 25,000 species in over 500 families is not something that the FishBase Team can do alone. Thus, we would like taxonomists to volunteer to become Taxonomic Coordinators in FishBase for their families of expertise, similar to the approach used in large checklists, such as CLOFFA (Daget et al. 1984), CLOFETA (Quéro et al. 1990) or Smiths’ sea fishes (Smith and Heemstra 1986). We realize that taxonomists are already overburdened with numerous tasks and may not be keen to take on yet another responsibility. We have therefore thought hard about what we can offer to make such collaboration more attractive. We will provide, to each Taxonomic Coordinator:
We will also attach the coordinator’s name to every record provided, modified or checked.
Please contact us if you are interested in becoming a Taxonomic Coordinator. We will send you a printout with all the taxonomic information completed so far for the species of your family. We will expect you to edit that printout and to provide us with relevant reprints that we may have missed. A FishBase Team member will be assigned as your contact and will make the changes to the database. We will provide you with a password that allows you to edit FishBase directly through the Internet. Please let us know what you think about this offer.
References Daget, J., J.-P. Gosse and D.F.E. Thys van den Audenaerde. 1984. Check-list of the freshwater fishes of Africa (CLOFFA). Office de la Recherche Scientifique et Technique Outre-Mer, Paris and Musée Royal de l’Afrique Centrale, Tervuren, Belgium. Vol. 1, 410 p.
Quéro, J.C., J.-C. Hureau, C. Karrer, A. Post and L. Saldanha, Editors. 1990. Check-list of the fishes of the eastern tropical Atlantic (CLOFETA). Junta Nacional de Investigaçao Cientifica e Tecnológica, Lisbon, Portugal.
Smith, M.M. and P.C. Heemstra, Editors. 1986. Smiths’ sea fishes. Springer Verlag, Berlin. 1047 p.
Rainer Froese |
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FishBase on the Web received over 750,000 hits in November 2000 | We believe that colleagues who opt to collaborate with us, i.e., opt to see some of their work incorporated into FishBase, benefit because:
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References |
Eschmeyer, W.N., Editor. 1998. Catalog of fishes. Special Publication, California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco. 3 vols. 2905 p.
Houde, E.D. and C.E. Zastrow. 1993. Ecosystem- and taxon-specific dynamic and energetics properties of fish larvae assemblages. Bull. Mar. Sci. 53(2):290-335.
Welcomme, R., Compiler. 1988. International introductions of inland aquatic species. FAO Fish. Tech. Pap. No. 294, 318 p. Daniel Pauly
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