1 / 17

H I S C O M

H I S C O M. Flora information Partnership Barry Conn Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney. Council of Heads of Australian Herbaria. Herbaria: centres of expertise in plant, algal & fungal biodiversity Australian collections - about 6.5 million Principal repositories of vouchered data

meli
Download Presentation

H I S C O M

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. H I S C O M Flora information Partnership Barry Conn Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney Council of Heads of Australian Herbaria

  2. Herbaria: • centres of expertisein plant, algal & fungal biodiversity • Australian collections - about 6.5 million • Principal repositories of vouchered data • Long-standing global and Australia-wide cooperative approach, • specimen exchange and loan • research across regional interests of herbaria • publication

  3. H I S C O M Herbarium Information Systems Committee Advisory committee to: Council of Heads of Australian Herbaria (CHAH) Aim of HISCOM: to advise, share, develop and promote all aspects of digitisation of herbarium information Representatives: all Government Herbaria University Herbaria representative New Zealand Herbaria representative ad hoc invitees: key partners (ABRS, ERIN) and collaborators

  4. Since mid 1970s herbarium information data-processed • Digitisation was driven by need for Census and Spatial data • Development of standards important • In the 1980s HISPID - An herbarium specimen-label data interchange standard was developed • HISPID used with specimens exchanged and loaned between Australian herbaria Digitisation of herbarium data in Australia

  5. Australian electronic plant, algal and fungal data: 1 Censuses • Vascular plants – full Australian coverage Nomenclator: Australian Plant Name Index • Cryptogams – incomplete • Fungi – incomplete, macrofungi current project for national census • Algae – national census of marine algae; freshwater algae Specimen data • 40% of 6.5 million specimens in Australian Govt herbaria Textual Descriptions: vascular plants - 65-70% coverage • Flora of Australia, plus monographs: 60% • State floras (SA, NSW, Tas, Vic, ACT – 95-99% coverage • Regional: Qld 62%, NT 70%, WA 40%) non-vascular plants, algae, fungi -Overall very incomplete coverage • National handbooks (Flora of Australia) • Regional or state handbooks (Marine Benthic Flora of Southern Australia; Lichens of SA; Mosses of SA)

  6. Australian electronic plant, algal and fungal data: 2 Image data • Image banks: few herbaria (CANB, PERTH) • Other image banks: specialists, a number in Botanic Gardens, Societies, other Govt agencies e.g. weeds Identification tools • Many - mostly using LucID and DELTA, other applications Tropical Rainforest (Whiffin & Christophel); Cycad Pages (Hill) • Notable on CD: Angiosperm families (World, Australian); Australian Rainforest Trees, Eucalyptus; Acacia. • On Web: WA Flora Catalogue, Cycad Pages, WattleWeb, NSW Flora On-line

  7. Australian eFloras and other digital products

  8. Australian eFloras and other digital products

  9. Australian eFloras and other digital products

  10. Development of Australia’s Virtual Herbarium (VAH) Aim of Prototype: demonstrate functional capabilities of a distributed network on Internet demonstrate the collective capability of IT expertise in Australian herbaria highlight the custodianship and legitimate claim by Australian herbaria to be stakeholders in Australian plant biodiversity projects highlight the need to resource data capture and delivery emphasise the essential underlying partnership

  11. H I S C O M 1999: Initial prototype - Acacia data from all mainland herbaria via a single query The Australian Government herbariaPartners in the initial prototype Common mulga Acacia aneura

  12. The Australian Government herbariaPartners in the initial prototype

  13. Australia’s Virtual Herbarium Stage 1 Web development

  14. Benefits of AVH over traditional herbarium practices Maximises limited resources • Sharing technological advances • Continue sharing IT developments • Move to sharing data: avoid duplication of effort • Duplicate specimens • Image banks • Descriptions • ID tools: simple and complex • Develop an on-line information system: effectively electronic Flora of Australia

  15. Benefits of AVH over traditional herbarium practices • Regional herbaria: distributed system or linkage to major State • State censuses: a thing of the past? • Increased accessibility to collections by Community • Publication - an On-line shared resource

  16. Australia’s Virtual Herbarium New opportunities Involving Community and other User groups • Increased collecting - gaps in plant distribution data obvious • Increased use of current plant systematic information New (and continued) partnerships • Access to other data and information through partnerships of mutual benefit to custodians Capacity to link to International networks

More Related