Major biodiversity databases have developed various approaches to handle undescribed taxa while maintaining taxonomic rigor. The
World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS) allows for five broad name status categories: Accepted, Unaccepted, Uncertain, Alternative representation, and Temporary. Within WoRMS, temporary names can be used both for higher-rank placeholder taxa that accommodate species of uncertain classification, and for unnamed species that have been clearly identified as distinct through taxonomic studies. The
Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) and
Ocean Biodiversity Information System (OBIS) incorporate undescribed taxa into their occurrence records using standardized fields in
Darwin Core, a biodiversity data standard. These databases use specific fields like "taxonConceptID" and "identificationQualifier" to track specimens that represent potentially new species. Management of undescribed taxa in databases presents unique challenges. For example, when a specimen is identified as representing a new species, it may initially receive a temporary collection-based identifier. This same specimen might then be referenced in molecular databases like
GenBank or BOLD (
Barcode of Life Data System) with a different identifier, and appear in published literature with yet another temporary name. Biodiversity databases must track these various identifiers and maintain links between them until the species receives formal taxonomic description. To address these challenges, database managers increasingly recommend standardized formats for temporary names. These often incorporate institutional collection codes, specimen numbers, or other stable identifiers that can help track specimens and their associated data across different databases and publications. When species are formally described, their temporary identifiers can be retained in databases as alternative names, maintaining the connection between pre- and post-description records. ==See also==