FishBase is a comprehensive
database of information about
fish. , it included descriptions of over 30,000
species, over 260,000
common names in hundreds of
languages, over 46,000 pictures, and references to
more than 42,000 works in the
scientific literature.
Overview
In 1987,
Daniel Pauly, inspired by the
Species Identification Sheets and other products
Walter Fischer had generated for the
Food and Agriculture
Organization in the 1970s, proposed a standardized database for
fish species, as a part of the "
ICLARM
Software Project". The following year, he began to work with
Rainer Froese, who had been working on
an
expert system to identify fish
larvae. After a first attempt to build a system using
Prolog, Froese switched to
DataEase, a
relational database for
DOS. In 1989 the project received its first grant.
In 1993 the project switched to
Microsoft Access, and 1995 the first
CD-ROM was released as "FishBase 100". Its
initial reviews in scientific journals lauded the scope but
criticized the remaining gaps in coverage. Subsequent CDs were
released annually, with the FishBase 2004 release needing five CDs,
or one DVD. The software needs
Windows 98
or later, and is not available on any other computer platform such
as
Mac OS X or
Linux.
FishBase first appeared on the
World Wide
Web in August 1996, and a
webmaster
was hired in the following year. In 1999 a new module on
ichthyoplankton and detailed data on fish larvae identification and
rearing was created (
LarvalBase) under
the supervision of Bernd Ueberschaer. Eventually, the complete data
of the CDs became available online.
Since the year 2000, FishBase has been run by the FishBase
Consortium. The consortium consists of:
As awareness of FishBase has grown among fish specialists, it has
attracted over 1300 contributors and collaborators. In order to
preserve its value as a scientific database, FishBase is not
allowed to include original data; all of its content must be based
on previously-published material.
See also
References
External links
- For early roots and possible future extensions see the German page.
Mirror sites: