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Small herbaria contribute unique biogeographic records to county, locality, and temporal scales.
Marsico, Travis D; Krimmel, Erica R; Carter, J Richard; Gillespie, Emily L; Lowe, Phillip D; McCauley, Ross; Morris, Ashley B; Nelson, Gil; Smith, Michelle; Soteropoulos, Diana L; Monfils, Anna K.
Affiliation
  • Marsico TD; Department of Biological Sciences, Arkansas State University, State University, PO Box 599, AR, 72467, USA.
  • Krimmel ER; Sagehen Creek Field Station, University of California Berkeley, 11616 Sagehen Road, Truckee, CA, 96160, USA.
  • Carter JR; Department of Biology, Valdosta State University, 1500 North Patterson Street, Valdosta, GA, 31698, USA.
  • Gillespie EL; Department of Biological Sciences, Marshall University, One John Marshall Drive, Huntington, WV, 25755, USA.
  • Lowe PD; Department of Biology, Valdosta State University, 1500 North Patterson Street, Valdosta, GA, 31698, USA.
  • McCauley R; Department of Biology, Fort Lewis College, 1000 Rim Drive, Durango, CO, 81301, USA.
  • Morris AB; Department of Biology, Middle Tennessee State University, Box 60, Murfreesboro, TN, 37132, USA.
  • Nelson G; Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, 142 Collegiate Loop, Tallahassee, FL, 32306, USA.
  • Smith M; Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, 142 Collegiate Loop, Tallahassee, FL, 32306, USA.
  • Soteropoulos DL; Department of Biological Sciences, Arkansas State University, State University, PO Box 599, AR, 72467, USA.
  • Monfils AK; Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission, 1100 North Street, Little Rock, AR, 72201, USA.
Am J Bot ; 107(11): 1577-1587, 2020 11.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33217783
ABSTRACT
PREMISE With digitization and data sharing initiatives underway over the last 15 years, an important need has been prioritizing specimens to digitize. Because duplicate specimens are shared among herbaria in exchange and gift programs, we investigated the extent to which unique biogeographic data are held in small herbaria vs. these data being redundant with those held by larger institutions. We evaluated the unique specimen contributions that small herbaria make to biogeographic understanding at county, locality, and temporal scales.

METHODS:

We sampled herbarium specimens of 40 plant taxa from each of eight states of the United States of America in four broad status categories extremely rare, very rare, common native, and introduced. We gathered geographic information from specimens held by large (≥100,000 specimens) and small (<100,000 specimens) herbaria. We built generalized linear mixed models to assess which features of the collections may best predict unique contributions of herbaria and used an Akaike information criterion-based information-theoretic approach for our model selection to choose the best model for each scale.

RESULTS:

Small herbaria contributed unique specimens at all scales in proportion with their contribution of specimens to our data set. The best models for all scales were the full models that included the factors of species status and herbarium size when accounting for state as a random variable.

CONCLUSIONS:

We demonstrated that small herbaria contribute unique information for research. It is clear that unique contributions cannot be predicted based on herbarium size alone. We must prioritize digitization and data sharing from herbaria of all sizes.
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Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Specimen Handling Type of study: Prognostic_studies Language: En Year: 2020 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Specimen Handling Type of study: Prognostic_studies Language: En Year: 2020 Type: Article