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Toward a global public repository of community protocols to encourage best practices in biomolecular ocean observing and research
Samuel, R.M.; Meyer, R.; Buttigieg, P.L.; Davies, N.; Jeffery, N.W.; Meyer, C.; Pavloudi, C.; Pitz, K.J.; Sweetlove, M.; Theroux, S.; Van de Kamp, J.; Watts, A. (2021). Toward a global public repository of community protocols to encourage best practices in biomolecular ocean observing and research. Front. Mar. Sci. 8: 758694. https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.758694
In: Frontiers in Marine Science. Frontiers Media: Lausanne. e-ISSN 2296-7745, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Keyword
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    omics; eDNA; ocean best practices; ocean observations; metadata; protocol management; methods

Authors  Top 
  • Samuel, R.M.
  • Meyer, R.
  • Buttigieg, P.L.
  • Davies, N.
  • Jeffery, N.W.
  • Meyer, C.
  • Pavloudi, C., more
  • Pitz, K.J.
  • Sweetlove, M.
  • Theroux, S.
  • Van de Kamp, J.
  • Watts, A.

Abstract
    Biomolecular ocean observing and research is a rapidly evolving field that uses omics approaches to describe biodiversity at its foundational level, giving insight into the structure and function of marine ecosystems over time and space. It is an especially effective approach for investigating the marine microbiome. To mature marine microbiome research and operations within a global ocean biomolecular observing network (OBON) for the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development and beyond, research groups will need a system to effectively share, discover, and compare “omic” practices and protocols. While numerous informatic tools and standards exist, there is currently no global, publicly-supported platform specifically designed for sharing marine omics [or any omics] protocols across the entire value-chain from initiating a study to the publication and use of its results. Toward that goal, we propose the development of the Minimum Information for an Omic Protocol (MIOP), a community-developed guide of curated, standardized metadata tags and categories that will orient protocols in the value-chain for the facilitated, structured, and user-driven discovery of suitable protocol suites on the Ocean Best Practices System. Users can annotate their protocols with these tags, or use them as search criteria to find appropriate protocols. Implementing such a curated repository is an essential step toward establishing best practices. Sharing protocols and encouraging comparisons through this repository will be the first steps toward designing a decision tree to guide users to community endorsed best practices.

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