Title: An Australian Virtual Herbarium
1An Australian Virtual Herbarium
Australian National Herbarium
2Panel
- HISCOM members
- AD - Bill Barker
- BRI - Peter Bostock
- CANB - Greg Whitbread
- DNA - Anne Fuchs
- HO -
- MEL - Marco Duretto, Paul Cholodniuk
- NSW - Barry Conn
- PERTH - Alex Chapman
3This Presentation
- Description of an AVH
- Need for an AVH
- Preparedness for a AVH
- Options for an AVH
4AVH - Keywords
- Herbarium
- Collections of botanical specimens
- Sources of botanical knowledge and expertise
- Sources of botanical information
5AVH - Keywords
- Virtual
- Appearing as
- Computer dependent
- Graphic, visual
- High Tech
- On-line
6AVH - Keywords
- Australian
- Implies national in coverage and view
- States and territories
- Government, educational
- Distributed
7Name Options
- Australian Virtual Herbarium
- Australian Herbarium Virtuality
- Virtual Herbarium of Australia
- Virtual Australian Herbarium
8What is an AVH like?
- Conceptual parallels in the
- Australian National Rare and Endangered Plant
Collection - Australian National Fungi Collection
- Australian National Plant Collection
9Foci of the AVH
- Past (and current) foci
- data
- database design
- technology
- networks
- Focus for an AVH
- Information
10Why do we need an AVH?
- Increasing expectations and demands on herbaria
- Increasing costs of using duplicated data
- Decreasing staff resources for herbaria
- Gaps in individual data coverage
- Competition from other sources
- Demonstrable relevance of herbaria
11Cost of Specimen Data
- Excluding computing herbarium support
- 4 (- 5) per collection
- c. 2 data entry
- c. 2 geocode calculation/verification
- Each duplicate redone by recipients
- Maybe 4 - 6 duplicates per collection
- 6 million herbarium specimens in Australia
- Less than 50 databased
12Costs of Other Data
- Each herbarium maintains census
- Each herbarium maintains taxonomy
- Each taxonomist maintains a taxonomy
- ? 5-6 x duplication of effort
- (Total curation costs 25-50 / specimen)
13Australian Herbarium Collections
- Herbaria completely databased
- BRI - 600 k
- QRS - 100 k
- DNA - 170 k
- PERTH - 400 k
14Australian Herbarium Collections
- Herbaria partially databased
- AD - 800 k (13 )
- CANB - 900 k (45 )
- HO - 350 k (20 )
- MEL - 1 M (6 )
- NSW - 900 k (25)
15Australian Herbarium Collections
- Summary estimates from State Herbaria
- November 1996
- c. 5.3 million collections
- c. 2.2 million databased
- c. 42 databased
16Australian Herbarium Collections
- c. 12 M to complete the job!
- c. 1.5 M if we share the task!
- Divided views in the past
- High priority - do it now
- Collect more - do it later
17Benefits of an AVH
- Shared and common data
- Common standards
- Common authority files
- Shared data entry and curation
- Access to a larger database
- Access to larger body of expertise
18Where have we come from?
- Printed books, articles
- Ledgers and cards (60s)
- Simple databases (70s)
- Complex databases (80s/90s)
- Network connection (90s)
- Exchange of and sharing data (90s)
19Are we ready for an AVH?
- Computerized collections data
- Compatible database design
- Common data standards
- Agreed data interchange format (HISPID)
- Increased technical understanding
- Common purpose
- Goodwill
20Elements of an AVH
- Plant name information
- Specimen information
- Observational information
- Taxon information
- Mapping and distributional information
- Expanding botanical knowledge
- Dissemination of knowledge
- Linking with other programs
21Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Plant name information
- Nomenclatural
- Taxonomic
- Systematic
- Typification
- Bibliographic
- Common names
22Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Specimen information
- Collections information
- Transactions (accessions, loans)
- Taxonomically authenticated point locality
information - Images
- live material, morphological, anatomical
23Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Observational information
- Surveys
- Sightings
- Anecdotal reports
24Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Taxon information
- Descriptive
- Monographs, revisions, Floras, etc.
- Images
- live material, morphological, anatomical
- Expert Identification systems
- Intkey, Lucid, Meka, etc.
25Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Mapping and distributional information
- checklists, censuses
- Electronic gazetteers
- GIS output
- Modeling
- Predictive output
26Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Expanding botanical knowledge
- phylogenetic analysis
- genetic studies
- taxonomic research
27Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Dissemination of knowledge
- Basic data
- Derived information
- Published floras
- Educational information
- Biological information systems
28Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Linking with other programs
- Regional biodiversity, environmental, resource
surveys - State and Territory surveys
- Local Surveys
29Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Linking with other programs (cont.)
- National biodiversity, environmental, resource
surveys - ABRS
- TSCS (ESU)
- NHT (Landcare, RFA, CRA, etc.)
- ERIN
- NRIC
30Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Linking with other programs (cont.)
- International projects
- Plant Names Project
- IOPI
- Species 2000
- NSF/ASC collections projects
- World Bank / GEF
- Data repatriation
31Elements of an AVH (cont.)
- Tools and Technology
- Network Connectivity Internet, WWW
- Database functionality
- Applications
32Can we build an AVH?
- We have the technology
- We have the ability
- We have the data
- We have the protocols and standards
- Do we have the will?
33Where to start?
- We are exchanging data
- Taxonomic and census data
- Specimen data
- Build a virtual type herbarium?
- ?
34Principles for an AVH
- Shared
- Collaborative
- Distributed
- Dynamic
- Accessible
- Authoritative
- Strategic and proactive
- Relevant
35(No Transcript)