%0 Journal Article %T Specimen and sample metadata standards for biodiversity genomics: a proposal from the Darwin Tree of Life project. %A Lawniczak, Mara K.N.; Davey, Robert P.; Rajan, Jeena; Pereira-da-Conceicoa, Lyndall L.; Kilias, Estelle; Hollingsworth, Peter M.; Barnes, Ian; Allen, Heather; Blaxter, Mark; Burgin, Josephine; Broad, Gavin R.; Crowley, Liam M.; Gaya, Ester; Holroyd, Nancy; Lewis, Owen T.; McTaggart, Seanna; Mieszkowska, Nova; Minotto, Alice; Shaw, Felix; Richards, Thomas A.; Sivess, Laura A. S.; Darwin Tree of Life Consortium %C UK %D 2022 %8 2022-07-18 %I F1000 Research Ltd. %J Wellcome Open Research %V 7 %U https://wellcomeopenresearch.org/articles/7-187/v1 %R 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.17605.1 %X The vision of the is to complete reference genomes for all of the planet’s ~2M described eukaryotic species in the coming decade. To contribute to this global endeavour, the (DToL ) was launched in 2019 with the aim of generating complete genomes for the ~70k described eukaryotic species that can be found in Britain and Ireland. One of the early tasks of the DToL project was to determine, define, and standardise the important metadata that must accompany every sample contributing to this ambitious project. This ensures high-quality contextual information is available for the associated data, enabling a richer set of information upon which to search and filter datasets as well as enabling interoperability between datasets used for downstream analysis. Here we describe some of the key factors we considered in the process of determining, defining, and documenting the metadata required for DToL project samples. The manifest and Standard Operating Procedure that are referred to throughout this paper are likely to be useful for other projects, and we encourage re-use while maintaining the standards and rules set out here. %G English %[ 2024-03-29 %9 Journal article %~ Hyku %W Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew