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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 D. Shannon Asencio The William and Linda Steere Herbarium The New York Botanical Garden
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
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
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
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
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
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
Plant family Determination Collection locality Collection date Plant description No. of duplicates Collection no. Habitat Field books – sample layout
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%
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!
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
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