Instructions for extended abstract submission to BISS
Complete instructions for submitting an extended abstract in Biodiversity Information Science and Standards for Living Data 2025.
On this page
- Latest news!
- Getting started
- To start a NEW abstract
- To return to an EXISTING abstract
- Collection [Colección]
- Title [Título]
- Authors [Autores]
- Presented at [Presentado en]
- Abstract [Resumen]
- Keywords [Palabras clave]
- References, figures, supplementary materials [Referencias, ilustraciones, material adicional]
- Acknowledgements [Reconocimientos/Agradecimientos]
- Submit for technical review
- Feedback and revisions
- Finalize and submit to journal
- Seeking help
- ARPHA-related-FAQs
- How does the editing process work?
- Why does it think I still have track changes?
- I see feedback and corrections to make in my abstract, but I don’t have access. Did I do something wrong?
- Where do I enter the state or province under address as an author?
- My abstract has been approved and it validates but why don’t I see a submit to the journal button?
- I use more than one email for my work. How do I choose one?
- How do I know the status of my abstract?
- What if I don’t see my abstract anywhere?
- What are the benefits of submitting an extended abstract?
- Where will I find published abstracts?
Last updated 24 July 2025
Latest news!
Submission deadline. 3 September 2025 is the deadline for submitting a NEW extended abstract to ARPHA for publication in Biodiversity Information Science and Standards (BISS).
Are you an old hand at ARPHA and just need a summary version of these instructions? See the TL;DR (too long; didn’t read) version.
Getting started
Register for Living Data 2025
An abstract must be accepted for an in-person, virtual, or on-demand presentation at Living Data 2025 to be eligible as an extended abstract submitted for publication in BISS. Registration for the conference is required (at minimum) by the author who is the presenter.
Introduction
Extended abstracts may be submitted based on oral presentations (including lightning talks) and posters accepted for presentation at the conference. Abstracts should be written for a general audience, provide context for your presentation and avoid unexplained jargon. You may submit in English or Spanish, however the template for submission is in English. Your abstract may include references, figures, tables, even supplemental material. See abstracts from past conferences for examples. Abstract submissions are limited to 6,000 characters (including spaces of all document content; supplemental materials are excluded from this count). Abstracts will be published in TDWG’s journal, Biodiversity Information Science and Standards (BISS). Publishing to BISS is an opportunity for you to add value to your conference registration, generate a citable snapshot of your work and enhance your abstract to better reflect your work (see more).
Cost
If the presenter or submitting author is a TDWG member in good standing for 2025 and registered for the conference, there is no additional cost to publishing an extended abstract. Non-TDWG members will be charged a nominal fee of €50 (plus VAT, if applicable*). A limited number of discounts for non-TDWG member authors/presenters, who registered for the conference as students or from countries with discounted registration fees, may be granted upon request. Please contact editor@tdwg.org.
* VAT is applicable only for VAT NON-registered customers based within the European Union. To avoid being charged VAT, the EU companies or persons should provide their VAT registration numbers validated with the EU taxation database (https://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/vies/).
Process overview
You will be writing your abstract in Pensoft’s online publishing platform, ARPHA writing tool. ARPHA allows you and your co-authors to collaborate throughout the creation and revision process of your draft. Outside contributors (not listed as authors), such as linguistic editors, may be given access to your abstract (see “need help” below).
After submitting your abstract for review, your abstract will be edited and peer reviewed by journal editors and volunteers solicited from the community. The review process is designed to enhance the accessibility of your content by the general reader and to help improve your presentation.
Abstracts will be published with Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs) after confirmation that the presenter has registered for the conference, payment of the publishing fee for non-TDWG members, and the abstract has been finalized and submitted to the journal by the submitting author. The submitting author does not have to be the same person who submitted the abstract to Living Data 2025, but should be an author who is available to respond to reviews and implement changes required for publication.
Communications
Email communications within ARPHA are limited. Only the submitting author will receive notifications from the editors about the status of their extended abstract and the next steps to be taken during the review process. Note that the volume of reviews may determine the speed at which editors may respond to some requests. Be sure to train your email system to recognize and permit emails from pensoft.net.
To resolve technical issues in ARPHA, please contact the BISS help desk via the ARPHA platform. For questions about the content of your abstract, contact editor@tdwg.org. For answers to meeting-related questions, please contact info@livingdata2025.com.
To start a NEW abstract
Begin on the BISS homepage
As the person submitting the abstract, you should register or log in to https://biss.pensoft.net/. You will need to acknowledge the Terms of Use if you are new to the system. If you do not receive the system notification containing your account confirmation link, please contact Pensoft’s team at journals@pensoft.net for assistance.
Click button for NEW abstract
After logging in, the Start Living Data 2025 Conference Abstract
button should be visible on the BISS homepage. Clicking this button takes you to the ARPHA writing tool and creates a new Untitled abstract with some of the author metadata you used to create your account. This is the easiest way to start a NEW abstract.
While you can now leave your abstract draft here (it will have been assigned an ARPHA identifier, with you as submitter), you are encouraged to start filling out its required fields. Later, when you return to work on your abstract, follow access instructions here.
Look for an email verification of the creation of your draft abstract in ARPHA (from awt@pensoft.net).
Do not create more than one draft for an abstract that you intend to submit. To make it easier to see your drafts, Pensoft has added a My drafts button (only appears if you have existing drafts) on your BISS dashboard, next to My tasks and Submit manuscript buttons when you sign in through BISS.
To return to an EXISTING abstract
Log in to ARPHA directly from https://arpha.pensoft.net. Choose title from My recent manuscripts
OR choose the View dashboard
button to see all manuscripts on which you are listed as an author, their status, and revision history.
Required fields
Fields with required data include Title, Author, Abstract, Keywords, Presenting Author, Presented At, Conflicts of interest, and Collection.
Access all but Collection from the list at the left by hovering over a category, and then clicking on the pencil icon and filling in requested information.
Regarding Conflicts of interest
(conflicto de intereses), you will be asked to specify if your abstract is (co-)authored by an editor in BISS. Select “No” unless Gail Kampmeier or Elycia Wallis are co-authors on your abstract.
Collection [Colección]
Each Collection
(in ARPHA) represents an organized session accepted for Living Data 2025, including posters, contributed orals and virtual On-Demand presentations. Please select the session to which your abstract has been assigned in the program.
Click Collections
on the top navigation bar of your manuscript (top right of figure below) for a drop-down list of sessions, organized by ID number. Choose the appropriate collection for your abstract. Designating a Collection is critical, as your abstract cannot be directed to the proper editors without this assignment. Note that both authors and editors have the ability to designate a collection.
Title [Título]
Use title case. Verify with Title Case Converter (select MLA for title style). Italicize scientific names. Do not use all uppercase letters for your title.
Authors [Autores]
Format
Do not enter author names, affiliations, or place names in all upper case. Make sure that authors with the same contact information are uniformly represented and do not show up differently in the author listing.
Submitting author [Autor que somete el trabajo]
The submitting author is the person who will ultimately be responsible and available to submit your abstract for review to the journal and who will finalize the abstract once approved for publication, including authorizing any payment due. ARPHA automatically assumes this to be the person first logging in and starting the abstract. It also assumes that person will be the first author. The author order can be changed, and the initial submitting author may be able to grant this role to another co-author. For help in changing the submitting author, please email journals@pensoft.net and reference the ARPHA number in your email.
Automated notifications from ARPHA or BISS about abstracts are sent only to submitting authors, although co-authors will see and be able to make changes to abstracts when they appear in Draft status in their ARPHA dashboard. Only the submitting author will see a button to submit a revised version of the abstract back to ARPHA.
It is the responsibility of the submitting author to make sure that all co-authors are aware of and agree with the information presented, that their contact information is correct, consistent (i.e., all authors from the same institution appear under the same superscript), and in the proper order in the chain of co-authors.
Co-authors [Co-autores]
To add co-authors, hover over Authors in the left-side navigation panel and use the pencil icon to edit these fields. Be sure to add affiliations for all authors.
When adding co-authors, please specify what rights each will have to comment only or to edit and comment. Note that it is the submitting author’s responsibility to notify all authors of this submission and their rights with regard to commenting or editing.
Corresponding author [Autor que recibe correspondencia]
Designate one author as the corresponding author (the person to whom correspondence should be addressed after publication). This may be any author or more than one author.
Presenting author [Autor que presenta]
The presenting author (added outside of the Authors metadata panel, after Keywords) is the person (or persons) who will be delivering the presentation at the conference (this should be consistent with the person listed as presenter on the conference platform). Type in the name of the presenter in the same way they are listed as an author in ARPHA. Do not add affiliations or honorifics. If there are multiple presenters, separate the names with a comma and space.
The presenting author will be responsible for a live, recorded, or poster presentation and must be fully registered for the conference by the time the abstract is approved for publication.
Presented at [Presentado en]
Make sure this is filled in with Living Data 2025
and only this.
Abstract [Resumen]
Requirements
Please write your abstract for a general audience, providing context for your presentation and avoiding unexplained jargon. You may submit in English or Spanish, however the template for submission is in English. These instructions will provide Spanish translations for headings you may encounter.
This abstract must be an expanded version of what was submitted and accepted for presentation at Living Data 2025.
Be sure to provide references for TDWG or other standards used in your work (e.g., Darwin Core Standard).
Character limit [Número máximo de caracteres]
Abstract submissions are limited to 6,000 characters (including spaces, title, authors and affiliations, keywords, references, etc. but not Supplementary Materials). The Validate
button will let you know this number.
Acronyms and abbreviations - NEW! [Acrónimos y abreviaciones]
Acronyms or abbreviations used to reference tools, protocols, internet terms, or institutions/organizations should be spelled out at first use if they are essential to the understanding of the text. Stable URL hyperlinks are also encouraged. All other acronyms or abbreviations used as examples may be spelled out at the discretion of the author but a reference, endnote or hyperlink at first use is strongly encouraged.
Exceptions to the above include:
- 3D, AI, API, DNA, RNA, GIS, HTML, WWW, URL, URI, XML, RDF, JPG, TIF, TIFF, PDF
- Units of measurement should follow the metric system https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_system and need not be spelled out.
- Parts-per-notation https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parts-per_notation need not be spelled out
- Country designations should either be spelled out as ISO 3166 (encouraged for first use) or use ISO 3166-A-2 or A-3 for a two or three letter abbreviation.
Hyperlinks and endnotes [Hipervínculos y notas al final del documento]
Do not show URLs as part of the abstract text (e.g., in parentheses).
Use embedded hyperlinks in text to supply helpful (e.g., links to institutional webpages, jargon or expanded acronyms), but not critical or unique to understanding your abstract. These links will not appear in the printed version of your abstract, so use of them can be considered value-added for those with an electronic version.
If it is essential to the appreciation of your content (e.g., resources specific to your work) that links are visible in any format, add and cite endnotes. These may appear as references to URLs that are spelled out at the end of the document.
Be mindful of persistence (not having future users find broken links) and irrelevant advertising if referencing commercial sites.
Editorial help
Need help with linguistics or other opinions about your abstract by non-authors? You may invite contributors to Edit & comment or Comment only within the manuscript. You may also email [editor@tdwg.org](mailto:editor@tdwg.org] for help (please reference the ARPHA identifier for the abstract). Please note that seeking confirmation from a fluent English-speaker is especially recommended if you have used AI to compose your abstract or translation tools to make automatic translations.
Keywords [Palabras clave]
List words that readers might use in a search to find your content, but do not add words already found in the title of your abstract.
Separate each keyword with a comma (not a semicolon) and space.
Only capitalize proper nouns; do not capitalize the first keyword unnecessarily.
References, figures, supplementary materials [Referencias, ilustraciones, material adicional]
You may add references, figures, tables and upload supplementary materials associated with the abstract. None of these are required. Create these resources first from the end of the left menu, before linking them to the appropriate text in your abstract.
Any figures, images, or media used in abstracts or presentations must be credited with their copyright status, even if they are your own. See TDWG’s Terms of Use.
Acknowledgements [Reconocimientos/Agradecimientos]
Use the optional fields Funder
, Funding program
, Grant title
, Hosting institution
to acknowledge supporters or institutions that you wish to thank or acknowledge for their contribution to the underlying research or support of your abstract. Be sure to solicit any additional acknowledgements from your co-authors. Keep in mind that the version you submit to the journal will be published as is and the workflow does NOT include an exchange of proofs with those acknowledged.
Aside from the specific fields above for acknowledging supporters, institutions, or grants, there is a general Acknowledgements
field for recognizing the use of AI generative tools or translation software in the creation of the abstract and to show appreciation for the help of people who were not co-authors.
Submit for technical review
Please proofread your submission carefully:
- Double check spelling
- Make sure that all acronyms and abbreviations have been expanded at first use (see policy)
- References to published work are properly added and cited
- Credit all images with licensing information (see Terms of Use)
- Keywords not appearing in the title are listed
- The presenter’s name appears the same as a listed author and in the conference platform
- The
Presented at
field is filled in withLiving Data 2025
- Verify that all authors agree with content provided.
Click the Validate
button to check that you have no outstanding omissions (ensures that mandatory fields are filled in, you have not exceeded the character limit, and the abstract is assigned to a collection) or errors flagged by the system (unresolved track changes or comments).
The submitting author should see the Submit for Technical Review
button (below the Validate
button). Clicking this button sends your abstract to the editors for consideration as part of Living Data 2025.
You should receive an auto-generated confirmation email (be sure to find this in your mailbox).
On your ARPHA dashboard, the status of the manuscript will change to “in pre-submission review” and will be in read-only mode for authors.
While your abstract is in pre-submission review, you may see the work of various technical editors suggesting changes to be made, or making comments on your abstract but you will only be able to view, not edit your submission yet. Wait until you receive official notice that feedback has been requested—do not ask technical editors to make changes.
Feedback and revisions
Technical editors may accept or reject your submission, or may send feedback requesting (more) revisions.
Draft (again): if a submission is returned to you for changes, its status will return to Draft. Only you and other authors with editing or commenting privileges will have access to the abstract until you make or respond to changes requested and send it back for technical review. Only the submitting author will receive email notification from awt@pensoft.net.
Editors may have used track changes to suggest wording/grammatical/orthographical changes made during the editing/review process. Accept or reject suggestions already in Track Changes and make changes to the text in response to comments provided by the editors. While you may justify not changing your text in a follow-up comment, all others should be resolved (click resolved
box) and changes made to your text. If you have immediate editorial questions, please email editor@tdwg.org and reference the ARPHA ID of your abstract in the subject line.
Once you have addressed (i.e., accepted or rejected) all of the Track Changes (the editing ribbon with next / previous buttons will disappear; see also issues) and resolved all closed comments (leave open comments without resolution or where you have provided a justification for not taking actions requested by the editors), please press the Validate
button to make sure that all issues have been cleared up. If your manuscript does not validate (i.e., headings are pink and there is more than the number of characters listed), please try to resolve outstanding issues. Sometimes these issues are linked to the source for correcting them; sometimes not. If you are stumped, first try refreshing your browser window or closing it and going back in; if you still can’t find the issue, contact the journal help desk (using feedback icon in top banner) or email editor@tdwg.org with the ARPHA ID and screen capture or description of your issue.
Is everything set? Hit the Submit for technical review
button and it should show that it is in read-only mode. Refreshing the browser window of your dashboard, you should see that it is once again “in pre-submission review.”
Your manuscript may require more than one cycle of revision so please address communications promptly.
Finalize and submit to journal
Once the submitting author receives notification that their abstract has been approved, they must now go through the process to finalize and submit the abstract to the journal for publication.
Verify in ARPHA
- Verify that the author order and their respective affiliations are correct and you have added Acknowledgements where appropriate.
- Double check the name of the presenting author (should appear as it does in the author list) and do a final proofing of your abstract.
- Validate. Next, click the
Validate
button first to make sure there are no lingering issues. See https://arpha.pensoft.net/tips/Finalise-a-Manuscript. Click on the blue text for each issue to resolve it. A successful validation will only show the number of characters in your abstract. - Once approved, the
Submit to the journal
button should become visible (if you do not see this button, you may not be listed as the submitting author (see Authors) in the ARPHA Writing Tool. When you are ready to submit your abstract for publication, click theSubmit to the journal
button and then go through the (long) checklist of submission steps.
After hitting Submit to the journal
- The first step in the checklist regards the license and copyright of your abstract. The default is CC BY 4.0 with copyright attributed to the authors. However, if any author is a U.S. or Canadian government employee, you must specify CC-0. Any other issues should be referred to the journal’s help desk.
- Step 2 requires that you mark the box indicating “I am aware that my abstract will be published only after registering for Living Data 2025 and payment of any fees for the publication of this extended abstract”.
- The final step asks you to assign categories (taxon, geographic area, scientific subject, geological era) to your submission; complete this step if it is applicable, but be sure to click through to the end of the submission process.
- When the submission process is finalized, you should receive an email confirming the successful submission and the abstract goes directly to production for publication, a DOI (digital object identifier) is assigned, and the abstract cannot be revised further (without difficulty).
- At publication, you should receive a confirmation email from the journal.
Incomplete submission
If, after your manuscript has been approved, you fail to complete all of the steps in the previous section, you may see it tagged as Incomplete Submission in your ARPHA dashboard, even though a BISS ID has been assigned to it.
Because this now has a BISS identifier, you must access actions to complete the submission (or delete it) via the BISS dashboard not ARPHA’s.
Seeking help
If, at any time, you need further technical assistance, check the Tips and tricks link or if you fail to find an answer to your question, click Feedback icon (on the top navigation bar to open a new window with an email form for you to fill in to the journal’s technical staff) OR for content/editorial questions, send an email to TDWG Editors editor@tdwg.org including the ARPHA ID of your abstract in the subject line. Note that icons now use tooltips (mouse over) and do not otherwise include text explanations.
ARPHA-related-FAQs
How does the editing process work?
Your abstract will be edited and reviewed for content and suitability as well as style and language. Once authors submit an abstract, the editors are notified about it, and they gain access to it. Once they evaluate it, and leave notes for its improvement (if any), the volume editors will send feedback to the authors. At that point you—as the Submitting author—receive an automated notification from awt@pensoft.net, with access in editing mode to the abstract. After you coordinate the modifications with your co-authors, you can resubmit. This cycle can be reiterated as many times as needed, until the abstract is accepted, and ready to be submitted to the journal (to be published as is). Please wait for the system notification.
Why does it think I still have track changes?
Lots of times it’s something small (e.g., a comma). Use the Next and Previous button in the Track Changes dialog to pinpoint what you may have missed. Sometimes though it’s a quirk of ARPHA (e.g., you added a reference while Track Changes was on and some of the text is green). Put your cursor in the middle of the text and then click Accept in the track changes menu. See Tips & Tricks for more help.
I see feedback and corrections to make in my abstract, but I don’t have access. Did I do something wrong?
Don’t worry–you did nothing wrong. Your abstract is still undergoing review (status should be in pre-submission review; see below to How do I know the status of my abstract) and should be sent back to you soon. If you have further questions or issues (e.g., you’re going to be out of touch soon for a period of time), email editor@tdwg.org so they know to expedite providing feedback once reviews are completed.
Where do I enter the state or province under address as an author?
ARPHA does not currently track that information. If you feel it is necessary, add an ISO 3166-2 code for your country’s subdivision, separating it from the city name with a comma and space.
My abstract has been approved and it validates but why don’t I see a submit to the journal button?
You may not be the person who originally submitted the abstract (see submitting author. If the submitting author is unavailable, please contact the Pensoft team at journals@pensoft.net for help.
I use more than one email for my work. How do I choose one?
In the ARPHA editorial platform, you should use only one email account that you check regularly, will have persistence, and that you do not mind being public (the system displays it publicly to other users and in published papers). This way all tasks appointed to the user will be accumulated under a single account and you will not have to log in and out and access several dashboards for a single journal. The editorial platform allows users to have different roles within the same journal and also in other journals hosted by Pensoft. The system does not allow adding more than one email per account and is not set to enable sending a copy of the same notification to an alternative email of the same user. If you have been asked to merge two or more accounts into a single one, Pensoft will need to choose one of the emails as primary. This is also used to send alerts and newsletters of Pensoft journal content to which you may subscribe.
Regardless of email, if you are an author and need to credit a particular institution for the work you are presenting, modify your affiliation in the author metadata for each abstract or manuscript submitted.
How do I know the status of my abstract?
Sign into ARPHA. Your abstract(s) should be listed under the My Manuscripts tab (text will be gray) on your dashboard. On the right of each manuscript, you can see the status. Note that only one person can work on an abstract at a time (either as authors or editors). If you are not actively working on a manuscript, please close the window to give others a chance to contribute. Note: the dashboard may give misleading indications that someone is editing the manuscript. You can verify if this is true by clicking on the manuscript title.
- Draft = authors have editing rights; editors see as read-only; authors must submit the abstract for review for the abstract to be released for editorial assessment.
- In pre-submission review = authors see as read-only; technical editors are able to make changes to the abstract and add comments. Authors may see these updates but will not be able to make changes until volume editors release the abstract back to the authors using the
Send Feedback
button. Pressing theSend Feedback
button returns the abstract to Draft mode so that authors may respond. - Once your abstract has been Approved, the submitting author will need to
Submit to the journal
and complete the final publication checklist (this consists of multiple screens; please be sure to follow it to the end). It then proceeds to Layout and is in a queue to be Published. The final deadline for submission to the journal will be determined. Make sure that the submitting author will be available until the process is complete. - If you fail to complete the final publication checklist, your abstract may be marked as Incomplete submission. You will get three automated warnings to remedy this before the system automatically buries/removes your submission from the publication queue.
- Both authors and technical editors can send email (see icon near the top of the page) to co-authors and/or editors at any time during the pre-approval process; this does not change the status of the manuscript. If you use this step, please fully reference your manuscript ID, the issue(s) and the person(s) you think should be responding to the email. The system sends individual emails out so no one receiving them knows who else is being asked to address your question. If in doubt, email editor@tdwg.org outside of the system instead.
- For an abstract associated with Living Data 2025 to be published, the presenter must be fully registered (i.e., any assessed fee paid) for the conference.
- Approved abstracts will be published once the placement of their presentation in the program is confirmed. Authors should receive notification of successful submission to the journal, pending publication.
What if I don’t see my abstract anywhere?
It is possible that you have more than one ARPHA account under different emails. You can resolve this by following these instructions.
Another possibility is that the ARPHA platform has automatically archived your abstract due to prolonged inactivity (does so after three ignored email warnings). You will need to notify Pensoft to retrieve such an abstract from this fate. Please make sure all communications include an article identifier (ID#) in the subject line. When it is returned, it will be in Draft mode and you will need to revise it and (re-)submit for technical review. Editors are not able to work on or accept a manuscript in Draft status.
Otherwise, communicate with the help desk (use the feedback icon located in the top banner of your abstract) to try to resolve technical issues or with editor@tdwg.org or info@livingdata2025.com for conference-related questions.
What are the benefits of submitting an extended abstract?
See Why submit an extended abstract in BISS?.
Where will I find published abstracts?
See published 2025 abstract collection. Sign up for email notifications of newly published content from Biodiversity Information Science and Standards after signing in.