“…1; also see Wen et al, 2015b). At present, the interconnectivity and interoperability of biological informatics databases is limited and is a recognized bottleneck (Page, 2008;Marhold et al, 2013) for an integrative discipline like systematics, which draws upon many kinds of data such as morphology, fossils, gene sequences, species lists that are housed in different repositories. The simple, and yet daunting way forward will be for the Biodiversity Cyberbank to connect to other resources via relational tables in a one-to-many relationship (Page, 2008) based on specimen records (e.g., collection objects in Morris, 2005); that is each specimen has a unique identifier that can be attached to many data points such as its taxonomy and synonymy, its herbarium and collector, gene sequences, GPS data, traits for species of its kind, and so on.…”