Case Study: Brazilian Virtual Herbarium

The Brazilian Virtual Herbarium (BVH) is one of Brazil's National Institutes of Science and Technology (a program of the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, CNPq) that has been running since 2009. The Virtual Herbarium provides an infrastructure that gathers digita...

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Main Author: Cameron Neylon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2017-10-01
Series:Research Ideas and Outcomes
Subjects:
bo
Online Access:https://riojournal.com/article/21852/
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spelling doaj-5934afcf05c94bddb94995d2c5babf8c2020-11-25T01:30:44ZengPensoft PublishersResearch Ideas and Outcomes2367-71632017-10-0131510.3897/rio.3.e2185221852Case Study: Brazilian Virtual HerbariumCameron Neylon0Curtin University The Brazilian Virtual Herbarium (BVH) is one of Brazil's National Institutes of Science and Technology (a program of the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, CNPq) that has been running since 2009. The Virtual Herbarium provides an infrastructure that gathers digital records of plant specimens from primary source, mainly in Brazil, and makes them available through a central web portal. The source herbaria have complete control over what data is made through the portal and the data collected by BVH is made fully available. BVH in common with many data infrastructures, faces challenges in retaining funding. Most funding sources are project based and as has been noted elsewhere this creates problems for the sustaining of infrastructures. BVH therefore has an interest in demonstrating the use of the data resources it hosts. Through the OCSDNet project it has strengthened its capacity in this area to develop tools showing its wide usage. Overall the BVH hosts over eight million records (as of October 2017) and received 70 billion data requests in October 2017. Its users are mainly in Brazil but there is also substantial global usage. The primary uses are for research and education. There are a broad range of educational users, including universities but also schools. Through providing a central aggregation and access point BHV provides a data infrastructure that is greater – and more useful – than the sum of its parts. https://riojournal.com/article/21852/research datadata managementdata sharingbo
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cameron Neylon
spellingShingle Cameron Neylon
Case Study: Brazilian Virtual Herbarium
Research Ideas and Outcomes
research data
data management
data sharing
bo
author_facet Cameron Neylon
author_sort Cameron Neylon
title Case Study: Brazilian Virtual Herbarium
title_short Case Study: Brazilian Virtual Herbarium
title_full Case Study: Brazilian Virtual Herbarium
title_fullStr Case Study: Brazilian Virtual Herbarium
title_full_unstemmed Case Study: Brazilian Virtual Herbarium
title_sort case study: brazilian virtual herbarium
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series Research Ideas and Outcomes
issn 2367-7163
publishDate 2017-10-01
description The Brazilian Virtual Herbarium (BVH) is one of Brazil's National Institutes of Science and Technology (a program of the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, CNPq) that has been running since 2009. The Virtual Herbarium provides an infrastructure that gathers digital records of plant specimens from primary source, mainly in Brazil, and makes them available through a central web portal. The source herbaria have complete control over what data is made through the portal and the data collected by BVH is made fully available. BVH in common with many data infrastructures, faces challenges in retaining funding. Most funding sources are project based and as has been noted elsewhere this creates problems for the sustaining of infrastructures. BVH therefore has an interest in demonstrating the use of the data resources it hosts. Through the OCSDNet project it has strengthened its capacity in this area to develop tools showing its wide usage. Overall the BVH hosts over eight million records (as of October 2017) and received 70 billion data requests in October 2017. Its users are mainly in Brazil but there is also substantial global usage. The primary uses are for research and education. There are a broad range of educational users, including universities but also schools. Through providing a central aggregation and access point BHV provides a data infrastructure that is greater – and more useful – than the sum of its parts.
topic research data
data management
data sharing
bo
url https://riojournal.com/article/21852/
work_keys_str_mv AT cameronneylon casestudybrazilianvirtualherbarium
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