how can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

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How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research? Elspeth Haston, Robyn Drinkwater, Robert Cubey & Ruth Monfries

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Page 1: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change

research?

Elspeth Haston, Robyn Drinkwater, Robert Cubey & Ruth Monfries

Page 2: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

Introduction• Pressed & dried

plant material mounted on board

• Data are held on the sheets

• Estimated 350 million specimens in worlds herbaria

Page 3: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

RBGE Herbarium

• 3 million specimens• 1697-present day• Databasing since 2000– 24% databased

• Imaging since 2004– 10% imaged

Page 4: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

Rapid entry workflow

6. Additional data entry

1. Minimal curation

2. Assign unique identifier (eg attach barcode)

3. Initial minimal data capture

4. Image specimen (camera or scanner)5. OCR

Page 5: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?
Page 6: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

Where are our specimens from?

Page 7: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

Locality data

• Lat/long – last 20 years this has been fairly consistent– Prior to this depended on collector

• Fit lat/long to older specimens• Various tools are being to developed to help

with this.

Page 8: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?
Page 9: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

• Vouchered collection – ID can be checked and verified

Page 10: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

• Taxonomically maintained

?

Page 11: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

• Various characters can be studied:– Phenology– Stomatal density– Leaf morphology

Page 12: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

• Offer a long history – can fill historic gaps in data collection for analysis of trends etc.

Specimens Observations

Time

No.

of r

ecor

ds

Page 13: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

Studies at RBGE

• Started after Robbirt et al 2010 paper– Looked at Ophrys sphegodes in collection here.

Correlated with papers findings• Followed up by study of UK Saxifraga hypnoides– Databased– Georeferenced– Phenology scored– Results analysed based on Central England

temperature

Page 14: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

Considerations

• Is there a standardised way to score characters?– Different taxonomic groups– Infloresence types

Page 15: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

Considerations

• Currently hold data in our central database

Page 16: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

Considerations

• How precise does the georeferencing need to be?

Page 17: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

Considerations

• Should we be targeting certain groups?– Key indicator species– Most vulnerable e.g. high montane species– Easily identified species

Saxifraga hypnoides Dionysia archibaldii Urtica dioica

Page 18: How can we release biodiversity data from herbarium specimens for climate change research?

• Robyn Drinkwater (Digitisation):[email protected]

• Elspeth Haston (Deputy Curator):[email protected]

Rob Cubey (Plant Records Officer):[email protected]

Ruth Monfries (Climate Change Officer):[email protected]