The summary below is the report of a retreat co-sponsored by the University of Kansas and individual attendees to discuss ways and means for the biological collections community to act collectively with respect to their biodiversity information. Summary of the Lawrence "Creating a national organization for biodiversity information" Retreat September 8-10, 1995 On September 8-10, 1995 fourteen people from diverse backgrounds and institutional affiliations met at the University of Kansas to discuss means for improving access to biodiversity information in the United States, particularly regarding biological collections. The participants were concerned with the long-term role of biological collections in improving the dissemination of biodiversity information for science and the public. The group agreed on the necessity to form an organization whose mission is to: Create or enhance the infrastructure and tools necessary to organize information derived from biological collections and associated biodiversity enterprises into a maximally accessible form to meet the needs of society and science. The long-term aims of the organization will be to facilitate the dissemination of existing and future collections data and information from the nation's biodiversity for use by policy makers, environmental managers, the public and the scientific and educational communities. To accomplish this mission the organization will: - assist biological collections with information management solutions, support and training; - build and support tools for managing systematic, biogeographic and ecological databases in a distributed and interoperable environment; - assist biological collections with managing technological change; - integrate biological collections-based data with other databases, modeling tools and geographic information systems; - foster the process of full international access to biological collections information; - reduce the technical, political and social barriers to the free interchange of biodiversity information; - support initiatives, such as "smart systematics," using technology and information science to improve the efficiency, quality and impact to society of biodiversity science; and - provide quality information on biodiversity to science educators from K-12 and the university system. - advocate the support of systematics, inventories, and taxon-focused research to assure our ability to generate and maintain accurate specimen-based data The next steps of this community initiative are to: 1. hold a planning and development workshop early in 1996 with the aim of bringing together collections personnel, information providers, technical specialists and users to formally establish the organization and to set its goals and operating mechanisms; 2. create a fully-staffed center (or centers) to provide technical and philosophical support, to provide bioinformatics products and services, and to carry out bioinformatics research and education; and 3. organize and run technical and specialist workshops and training sessions. Leonard Krishtalka ([log in to unmask]) Julian Humphries ([log in to unmask]) Quentin Wheeler ([log in to unmask]) John Schnase ([log in to unmask]) Scott Miller ([log in to unmask]) Scott Lanyon ([log in to unmask]) William Fink ([log in to unmask]) James Beach ([log in to unmask]) Patrick Kociolek ([log in to unmask]) Daniel Janzen ([log in to unmask]) Winnie Hallwachs ([log in to unmask]) Arthur Chapman ([log in to unmask]) Peter Arzberger ([log in to unmask]) Meredith Lane ([log in to unmask])