The New Bioinformatics: Integrating Ecological Data from the Gene to the Biosphere

Matthew B. Jones(University of California, Santa Barbara), Mark Schildhauer(University of California, Santa Barbara), O. J. Reichman(University of California, Santa Barbara), Shawn Bowers(University of California, Davis)
Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics
August 14, 2006
Cited by 226

Abstract

Bioinformatics, the application of computational tools to the management and analysis of biological data, has stimulated rapid research advances in genomics through the development of data archives such as GenBank, and similar progress is just beginning within ecology. One reason for the belated adoption of informatics approaches in ecology is the breadth of ecologically pertinent data (from genes to the biosphere) and its highly heterogeneous nature. The variety of formats, logical structures, and sampling methods in ecology create significant challenges. Cultural barriers further impede progress, especially for the creation and adoption of data standards. Here we describe informatics frameworks for ecology, from subject-specific data warehouses, to generic data collections that use detailed metadata descriptions and formal ontologies to catalog and cross-reference information. Combining these approaches with automated data integration techniques and scientific workflow systems will maximize the value of data and open new frontiers for research in ecology.


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