Title: H I S C O M
1H I S C O M
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- Flora information Partnership
- Barry Conn
- Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney
Council of Heads of Australian Herbaria
2- Herbaria
- centres of expertise in plant, algal fungal
biodiversity - Australian collections - about 6.5 million
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- Principal repositories of vouchered data
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- Long-standing global and Australia-wide
cooperative approach, - specimen exchange and loan
- research across regional interests of herbaria
- publication
3H 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- Digitisation of herbarium data
- in Australia
- 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
5Australian 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)
6Australian 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
7Australian eFloras and other digital products
8Australian eFloras and other digital products
9Australian eFloras and other digital products
10Development of Australias 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- The Australian Government herbariaPartners in
the initial prototype
Common mulga Acacia aneura
12- The Australian Government herbariaPartners in
the initial prototype
13- Australias Virtual Herbarium Stage 1 Web
development
14Benefits 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
16Australias 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
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