1 / 39

Virtual Federal Herbarium Prototype

Virtual Federal Herbarium Prototype. Ed Gilbert, Southwest Environmental Information Network Ann Hitchcock, National Park Service. What is a virtual federal herbarium?. Specimen data and images Public web interface Searchable Focus on federal specimens Integrated with non-federal data.

Solomon
Télécharger la présentation

Virtual Federal Herbarium Prototype

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Virtual Federal Herbarium Prototype Ed Gilbert, Southwest Environmental Information Network Ann Hitchcock, National Park Service

  2. What is a virtual federal herbarium? • Specimen data and images • Public web interface • Searchable • Focus on federal specimens • Integrated with non-federal data

  3. Why a virtual federal herbarium prototype? • Expand access to federal data for science researchers, land managers, educators, students, amateur botanists, youth groups, etc. • Integrate federal and non-federal data (SEINet) • Refine search design to improve federal data results • Encourage federal participation in regional virtual herbarium initiatives

  4. Who is involved in the prototype? • NPS and SEINet • NPS, BLM and USFS data sources • Other federal bureaus/agencies to be added • Non-federal herbaria • Endorsed by Biodiversity and Ecosystem Informatics Working Group (BioEco), Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, National Science and Technology Council

  5. What is SEINet? • Virtual flora/herbarium • Specimen-based • Research and education • Biodiversity portal • Specimen search engine • Species checklists • Interactive identification key • Image library

  6. What is the geographic scope? • Southwest USA • 1.1 Million specimens • 21 Herbaria • 11 Arizona • 5 New Mexico • 3 Adjacent states • 1 Sonora, Mexico • 1 NY Botanical Garden

  7. What kinds of searches are possible? • Specimen search engine • Specimen listing • Specimen images • Interactive maps • Google Map • Google Earth • Species checklist • Identification key

  8. Why is a specimen-based model important? • Backbone of floristic research • Vouchers • Proof of occurrence • Expert reviewed • Verifiable • 70,000,000+ US specimens

  9. What are the benefits of the virtual environment? • Scientifically complete • Flexible presentation • Public outreach • Cost effective • Collaborative • Software developers • Herbarium curators • Land managers

  10. Virtual Environment has Great Potential • Arizona Flora • Annuals of the Grand Canyon National Park • Grasses of the San Pedro Riparian Nat’l. Cons. Area • Asteraceae within 30 miles of 34.2°, -112.4° • My Backyard Flora

  11. What is Symbiota? • Content Management System (CMS) for biodiversity and floristic data • Other data nodes using Symbiota software • SEINet – Plants of Southwestern North America • Consortium of North American Lichen Herbaria • Madrean Archipelago Biodiversity Assessment • Flora & Fauna within Arizona, New Mexico, Sonora Mexico • CoTRAM – Cooperative Taxonomic Resource for American Myrtaceae • Neotropical Virtual Flora

  12. Multiple presentations of a single, integrated dataset • Independent Symbiota data node • Self contained database and website • Sub-node • Other node’s database with separate website • Floristic Project • Collections of specimens, checklists, keys, etc. • Local Flora • Researchers, land managers, graduate students • IFRAME insert into agency website

  13. What is the timeline for the prototype? • Fall 2009 • Project start • Winter 2010 • Compile and define datasets • Share concept with other regional virtual herbarium nodes • Spring 2010 • Develop search interface for federal collections • Demo at Earth Day event on National Mall • Fall 2010 • Expand data set beyond NPS, BLM, USFS • Winter 2011 • Complete Symbiota software & documentation • Build toward US Virtual Herbarium

  14. Contacts Ed Gilbert SEINet Administrator, Symbiota Developer Global Institute of Sustainability (GIOS) Arizona State University egbot@asu.edu 520-481-7638 Ann Hitchcock Senior Advisor for Scientific Collections National Park Service ann_hitchcock@nps.gov 202-354-2271

  15. Acknowledgments • Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum • Arizona State University Herbarium • Bureau of Land Management • Global Institute of Sustainability (ASU) • National Park Service • National Science Foundation • National Science and Technology Council • Sky Island Alliance • U.S. Forest Service • Regional herbaria • Local and regional data managers

More Related