Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Biodiversity Heritage Library

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Type of site
  
Digital library

Launched
  
2005

Commercial
  
No

Website
  
biodiversitylibrary.org

The Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) is a consortium of natural history and botanical libraries that cooperate to digitize and make accessible the legacy literature of biodiversity held in their collections and to make that literature available for open access and responsible use as a part of a global “biodiversity commons.” The BHL consortium works with the international taxonomic community, rights holders, and other interested parties to ensure that this biodiversity heritage is made available to a global audience through open access principles. In partnership with the Internet Archive and through local digitization efforts, the BHL has digitized millions of pages of taxonomic literature, representing tens of thousands of titles and more than 100,000 volumes.

Contents

Founded in 2005, BHL soon became the third broad digitization project for biodiversity literature, after Gallica and AnimalBase. In 2008, the size of Gallica and AnimalBase was passed, and BHL is now by far the world's largest digitization project for biodiversity literature.

It is a cornerstone organization of the Encyclopedia of Life.

Composition

Initially, the Biodiversity Heritage Library was a collaboration of ten natural history and botanical libraries and currently, it has fourteen members. The founding member libraries are:

  • American Museum of Natural History (New York, New York)
  • Field Museum of Natural History (Chicago, Illinois)
  • Botany Libraries (Harvard University Herbaria) (Cambridge, Massachusetts)
  • Ernst Mayr Library (Museum of Comparative Zoology) (Cambridge, Massachusetts)
  • Marine Biological Laboratory of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (Woods Hole, Massachusetts)
  • Missouri Botanical Garden (St. Louis, Missouri)
  • Natural History Museum (London, England)
  • The New York Botanical Garden (Bronx, New York)
  • Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (Richmond, United Kingdom)
  • Smithsonian Institution (Washington D.C.)
  • In May 2009, two new members were added to the consortium:

  • Academy of Natural Sciences (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
  • California Academy of Sciences (San Francisco, California)
  • In November 2011, two new members were added to the consortium:

  • Cornell University Library (Ithaca, New York)
  • United States Geological Survey (Reston, Virginia)
  • In February 2013, one new member was added to the consortium:

  • Library of Congress (Washington D.C.)
  • Since 2009, the BHL has expanded globally. The European Commission’s eContentPlus program has funded the BHL-Europe project, with 28 institutions, to assemble the European language literature. In May 2009 a European partner project BHL-Europe was founded by 28 consortium partners, mostly European libraries. Shortly thereafter another project BHL-China was launched in Beijing, in collaboration with the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Since then BHL in the strict sense has been called BHL-US/UK (usually only BHL-US), the global project has been referred to as BHL-Global, to distinguish it from the US/UK project. The global BHL project is managed primarily by the Smithsonian Institution (Washington, D.C.), Natural History Museum (London), and Missouri Botanical Garden. Six regional centers are planned. Additionally, the Atlas of Living Australia, Brazil (through SciELO), and the Bibliotheca Alexandrina have created regional BHL nodes. These projects will work together to share content, protocols, services, and digital preservation practices.

    There is an online BHL portal featuring Google Maps API integration, AJAX, tag clouds, and JPEG2000 images that facilitate multi-resolution zoom and pan.

    A companion project exists in Europe and is known as Biodiversity Heritage Library for Europe.

    Awards

    The Biodiversity Heritage Library was awarded the 2010 John Thackray Medal of the Society for the History of Natural History. This award "recognizes significant achievements in the history or bibliography of natural history".

    In March 2012, the Missouri Botanical Garden received $260,000 in funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities to identify and describe natural history illustrations from the digitized books and journals in the online Biodiversity Heritage Library. The Art of Life project will develop software tools for automated identification and description of visual resources contained within the more than 100,000 volumes and 38 million pages of core historic literature made available through BHL digitization activities.

    IDG’s Computerworld Honors Program announced on March 19, 2013 The Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) as a 2013 Laureate. The annual award program honors visionary applications of information technology promoting positive social, economic, and educational change.

    In May 2013, The Biodiversity Heritage Library was the recipient of the Charles Robert Long Award of Extraordinary Merit from the Council on Botanical and Horticultural Libraries (CBHL). The award is the highest honor bestowed by CBHL, honoring outstanding contributions and meritorious service to the field of botanical and horticultural literature, with only 14 recipients named since 1988.

    In appreciation of the services to taxonomists, a species of snail from Laos was named Vargapupa biheli in 2015, the species name derived from the initials BHL.

    References

    Biodiversity Heritage Library Wikipedia