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The Projeto Flora Amazônica field books: An excellent resource for improving data input efficiency

The Projeto Flora Amazônica field books: An excellent resource for improving data input efficiency. D. Shannon Asencio The William and Linda Steere Herbarium The New York Botanical Garden. The William and Lynda Steere Herbarium.

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The Projeto Flora Amazônica field books: An excellent resource for improving data input efficiency

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  1. The Projeto Flora Amazônica field books: An excellent resource for improving data input efficiency D. Shannon Asencio The William and Linda Steere Herbarium The New York Botanical Garden

  2. The William and Lynda Steere Herbarium • Steere Herbarium (NY) is among the four largest in the world (ca. 7 million specimens); largest in the western hemisphere • All plants groups represented, as well as fungi and lichens • Emphasis on New World flora, with particular strength in Brazilian specimens

  3. Collections digitization at NY • Started 17 years ago • KE EMu (Electronic Museum) software • System of nested modules • Good choice for integrating data previously generated in NYpc • Used for maintaining Index Herbariorum, a global directory of public herbaria and associated staff • American Botanical Literature searchable database • Curator research web pages

  4. Projeto Flora Amazônica • Bi-national effort between Brazil and U.S. • Initiated in January 1976 • First expedition took place late 1977 • 25 expeditions • Fieldwork completed 1987 Prance et al., 1984

  5. Programa Flora • Four principal objectives: • To produce as complete an inventory as possible of the plant resources of Brazil • To make the data gathered available in an easily accessible format so that it can be used for the social and economic benefit of humans • To establish regional research centers throughout Brazil capable of carrying out the inventory on a local basis, in preparation for studies on economic uses of plants, ecological challenges, and environmental conservation • To encourage the education and training of Brazilian botanists, particularly in plant systematics and data management, through graduate courses and training programs Prance et al., 1984

  6. Amazon Digitization Project • Started in January 2008 • Goal: to catalogue and image all NY specimens from the Brazilian Amazon • Initial approach: skeletal records • Later approach: complete geographical data • Data repatriation: InstitutoNacional de PesquisasdaAmazônia (INPA) Google Maps

  7. Methods for improving rapid data entry • Importation of duplicate specimen data from other institutions • Querying nearby collection data • Mass collection data input using collector field books

  8. Field books in the archives of NY

  9. Plant family Determination Collection locality Collection date Plant description No. of duplicates Collection no. Habitat Field books – sample layout

  10. Collection data input

  11. The product

  12. Results • A total of 53,920 specimen collection events created using field books • Average of 641 collection records created each day using this method • Productivity as high as 1,557 records created in a single day • Cataloguing rates up ca. 50%

  13. Caution! • Older field books can be difficult to read and interpret • Collection numbers are not necessarily unique identifiers • Separate data sources (e.g. field books vs. labels): possible inconsistencies • Data must be validated!

  14. Conclusions • It is worth exploring a variety of data sources, especially when undertaking large-scale cataloguing projects • Using data gathered in the field (i.e. field books) is an effective method for improving the work flow of databasing projects • Naturally grouped data, such as field book entries, are easy to enter collectively and can provide comparable data quality to specimen labels • These advantages to data entry can be applied to any type of specimen cataloguing, not just botanical cataloguing

  15. Acknowledgements • National Science Foundation • Barbara Thiers, Michael Bevans, Anthony Kirchgessner, Melissa Tulig, Benito Santos, Nicole Tarnowsky, Stephen Gottschalk, Benjamin Saracco, and several volunteers • Visit the Virtual Herbarium: http://sciweb.nybg.org/science2/vii2.asp

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