
I'm a biblio-naturalist, semantic consultant, and critical librarian designing infrastructures for managing scientific collections, archival records, and multilingual, multicultural knowledge systems. I develop ontologies, metadata architectures, and linked data pipelines — structuring information the way it deserves to be remembered. Knowledge and memory are not passive records — they are living processes. They must be explored, narrated, and transformed, because they are also resistance, adaptation, and survival. For over 25 years, I've worked across libraries, archives, scientific institutions, and traditional communities, weaving biodiversity, historical knowledge, and cultural memory into cohesive, interoperable frameworks. My work serves researchers, institutions, and communities by building ethical infrastructures that connect the silenced and the stored, the analog and the digital. My practice bridges semantic technologies, biocultural archives, decolonial methods, and archival memory — with storytelling as both a method and a structure for reactivating erased or fragmented knowledge. As a biblio-naturalist, I see ecosystems and archives as parallel memory systems, and I design strategies, tools, and spaces that allow them to speak with clarity and integrity. You can find my extended profile at www.edgardocivallero.com.