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Division of Environmental Biology


Revisionary Syntheses in Systematics


CONTACTS
Name Email Phone Room
Charles  Lydeard clydeard@nsf.gov (703) 292-7142  635 N  


PROGRAM GUIDELINES

Announcement  04-616

Important Information for Proposers

A revised version of the NSF Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG) (NSF 22-1), is effective for proposals submitted, or due, on or after October 4, 2021. Please be advised that, depending on the specified due date, the guidelines contained in NSF 22-1 may apply to proposals submitted in response to this funding opportunity.


DUE DATES

Archived


SYNOPSIS

Dear Colleague Letter             

Title: Revisionary Syntheses in Systematics (REVSYS)

Dear Colleague,

The Cluster for Systematic Biology and Biodiversity Inventories within the Division of Environmental Biology (see the program description, pd047374, on the NSF website at http://www.nsf.gov/pubsys/ods/getpub.cfm?ods_key=pd047374) encourages the submission of proposals aimed at synthesizing available and new species-level taxonomic information in the context of providing revisionary treatments and predictive classifications for particular groups of organisms.

Such revisionary syntheses in systematics (REVSYS) are the fundamental building blocks of our knowledge of planetary biodiversity. These syntheses accomplish many ends simultaneously:

1.    they bring together all the specimens available (or other archival or voucher material), in the world's natural history collections, of a particular group of organisms, so that

2.    investigators can compare the attributes of all those specimens, and the distribution of those attributes in space and time, to enable

3.    populations of different species to be distinguished from each other, and

4.    questions about how those species are related to each other (i.e., what natural groups of species exist) to be addressed, so that

5.    highly predictive classifications can be established, which allow us to generalize from those few attributes that have been studied to the far larger universe of attributes that remain to be investigated.

Titles of proposals emphasizing such Revisionary Syntheses in Systematics should be prefaced with “REVSYS:”, and those proposals can be submitted to either the Biodiversity Surveys & Inventories panel (BS&I) or Systematic Biology panel for the two regular target dates each year (January 9 and July 9).

Our goals are to help revitalize revisionary systematics, so that it fully utilizes modern information technology at all stages, from data capture (e.g., digital imaging, geo-referencing, etc.) and analysis (e.g., sequence alignments, phylogeny reconstructions, GIS, image analysis, etc.) through to electronic presentation and dissemination of the results.  Interactive keys and automated recognition systems have enormous potential for enabling accurate identifications of organisms by non-specialists, but only for those groups that have been thoroughly revised by knowledgeable specialists.

REVSYS proposals that seek to develop and deploy modern technological advances in data capture, analysis, and dissemination are encouraged.  Projects that incorporate graduate and/or undergraduate students as full partners in the research, conceptually and operationally, and that increase participation of members of groups underrepresented in science are especially encouraged.

The target dates for proposal submission to either BS&I or Systematic Biology are January 9 and July 9 each year. NSF FastLane requirements (www.fastlane.nsf.gov) apply to all proposals submitted to the Cluster. Proposals must conform to all format requirements in the Grant Proposal Guide http://www.nsf.gov/pubsys/ods/getpub.cfm?gpg; in particular, pay attention to requirements for addressing Broader Impacts, for presenting Results of Prior NSF Support for all PIs and co-PIs, and for avoiding unauthorized appendices.

Investigators with questions about REVSYS proposals are encouraged to contact the Cluster’s program officers on the BIO homepages at http://www.nsf.gov/staff/subdiv.cfm?key=193 . Lists of previous REVSYS awards with links to their FastLane Award Abstracts are posted on the NSF website at http://www.nsf.gov/bio/pubs/awards/revsys.htm.

 


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What Has Been Funded (Recent Awards Made Through This Program, with Abstracts)

Map of Recent Awards Made Through This Program