Biodiversity Heritage Library

Biodiversity Heritage Library
Biodiversity Heritage Library logo
ProducerBiodiversity Heritage Library consortium (United States)
History2006–present
LanguagesEnglish
Access
CostFree
Coverage
Disciplinesbiodiversity
Record depthIndex and full-text
Format coverage
  • Books
  • Journal
  • Trade and magazine articles
  • Newsletters
Geospatial coverageWorldwide
Links
Websitebiodiversitylibrary.org

The Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) is the world’s largest open access digital library for biodiversity literature and archives. BHL operates as a worldwide consortium of natural history, botanical, research, and national libraries working together to address this challenge by digitizing the natural history literature held in their collections and making it freely available for open access as part of a global "biodiversity community". The BHL consortium works with the international taxonomic community, publishers, bioinformaticians, and information technology professionals to develop tools and services to facilitate greater access, interoperability, and reuse of content and data. BHL provides a range of services, data exports, and APIs to allow users to download content, harvest source data files, and reuse materials for research purposes. Through taxonomic intelligence tools developed by Global Names Architecture, BHL indexes the taxonomic names throughout the collection, allowing researchers to locate publications about specific taxa. In partnership with the Internet Archive and through local digitization efforts, BHL's portal provides free access to hundreds of thousands of volumes, comprising over 59 million pages, from the 15th-21st centuries.[1]

Founded in 2006, 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.[2]

It was the literature cornerstone of the Encyclopedia of Life.

  1. ^ Cummins, Eleanor (2017-11-20). "2 Million Beautiful Images of Biodiversity Are Now Available for Free". Slate Magazine. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  2. ^ Kasperek, Gerwin (2010). "Eine Übersicht von für die Biologie relevanten Projekten zur Digitalisierung historischer Fachliteratur. Darstellung eines speziellen Segmentes aus dem Internetquellen-Führer einer Virtuellen Fachbibliothek" (PDF). Bibliotheksdienst. 44 (5): 448–460. doi:10.1515/bd.2010.44.5.448. ISSN 0006-1972. S2CID 201055784. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-21.

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