Researchers to compile Earth's 'book of life'

Over the next 10 years, they vow to gather information about the planet's 1.8 million species and make it available on the Web free of charge.

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In a speech he gave after receiving this year's Technology, Entertainment and Design award (watch it at: www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/83), he asked people around the world to help make the encyclopedia a reality.

"Working together, you can make this real," Dr. Wilson said. "The encyclopedia will quickly pay for itself in practical applications. It will transform the science of biology in ways of obvious benefit to humanity. And, most of all, it can inspire a new generation of biologists to continue the quest that started for me 60 years ago. To search for life, to understand it, and to preserve it."

Yet if the Internet didn't exist, it's not likely this project would, either. Scientists have been cataloguing life on Earth for about 250 years. That information, however, is scattered throughout universities, museums, and research institutes around the planet. Scientists often have to travel to other parts of the world to research flora or fauna in their own country. Having a global communications and storage network available, like the Internet, means those scientists can stay at home to do their research.

The site will be modeled after Wikipedia, the popular online encyclopedia. According to Science Daily, each species will have a "Wikipedia-style Web page detailing each organism's genome, geographic distribution, phylogenetic position, habitat, and ecological relationships."

The project coordinators will open scanning centers around the world (they already exist in Boston, London, and Washington, D.C.), where researchers will scan tens of millions of pages of research, clean up the data, and prepare it for the publication on the Internet.

Like Wikipedia, the project will also be "open source." So birders, amateur naturalists, school children, and others will be able to contribute to the project in a special section. Unlike Wikipedia, however, all the articles in the main section will be reviewed and approved by scientists before they are published.

A project like this not only takes a lot of time, but also a lot of money. The John D. and Catherine T. Mac­Arthur Foundation will support the Encyclopedia of Life with a $10 million grant, while the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation has agreed to give $2.5 million. A condition of both of these gifts, however, is that the project become self-sustaining financially (but free to users).

You can visit the Encyclo­pedia of Life at: www.eol.org. The website already has a development timeline along with an extensive Frequently Asked Questions section that describes the project in greater detail. The EOL site also contains a few test pages: a page for the polar bear at www.eol.org/vision/bear_expert.html and for the yeti crab at www.eol.org/vision/crab_expert.html. There is also a four-minute information video at YouTube (www.youtube.com/watch?v=6NwfGA4cxJQ).

Biweekly columnist Tom Regan also hosts NPR.org's Newsblog.

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(Mary Knox Merrill/Staff)
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