Mobilizing New England Vascular Plant Specimen Data

From iDigBio
Revision as of 08:26, 16 October 2015 by Djennings (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Digitization TCN: Mobilizing New England Vascular Plant Specimen Data to Track Environmental Change (NEVP)

New England Vascular Plants TCN
NEVP.jpg
Quick Links
Project Summary
Current Research
Project Websites
Collaborators Map

Project Summary

Herbarium specimens provide a source of historical information useful to the study of global environmental change. The goal of this project is to provide data to support studies of the nature and consequences of environmental change in the New England region over the last three centuries. This project will digitally capture specimen data and images from about 1.3 million vascular plant specimens from herbaria across New England, enhancing the data with georeferencing, habitat, and phonological information. The digitization process will integrate with existing community efforts and will develop novel high-throughput digitization technologies to increase efficiency and decrease costs. All resulting data and images will be freely available on-line.

The data from this project will be of immediate use to scientists who study climate and land-use change, and will provide a better understanding of how global changes will impact the distribution of native and introduced plant species. This project will benefit research in taxonomy, ecology, morphology, biogeography, and evolutionary history by making available data on an entire regional flora in an electronic format. The methodologies developed will provide a model for other regions around the nation. In addition the project will utilize citizen scientists, school groups, and students providing training, research, and educational opportunities. . This award is made as part of the National Resource for Digitization of Biological Collections through the Advancing Digitization of Biodiversity Collections program and all data resulting from this award will be available through the national resource (https://www.idigbio.org).

Current Research

Proposed research:

  • Understanding the effects of rising temperature on the phenology (flowering and leafing-out stage) for New England taxa.
  • Impact on landscape of human activity through deforestation, agriculture, and the development of human infrastructure on New England habitat.
  • Intersection of climate change and land use and effects on biotic systems in New England, such as sensitivity of habitats, changes in species abundance and phenology.
  • Documentation and conservation of biological diversity, including assessing the distribution of rare and endangered species, changes in species abundance over time, arrival and expansion of non-native and invasive species.
  • Project Leadership

    Project Sponsor: Yale University

    Principal Investigators (PIs): Patrick Sweeney (PI), Michael Donoghue (Co-PI)

    Project Websites

    http://nevp.org/
    http://portal.neherbaria.org/portal/

    Collaborators Map

    https://www.idigbio.org/content/digitization-tcn-mobilizing-new-england-vascular-plant-specimen-data-track-environmental

    NSF Award Number

    1209149

    Project Collaborators

    Bartlett Arboretum
    Berkshire Museum
    Boston University
    Brown University
    Central Connecticut State University
    Chicago Botanic Garden, Project Budburst (no data)
    Connecticut College
    Harvard University
    Harvard University, Farlow Herbarium
    Harvard University, Harvard Forest
    Keene State College
    North Carolina State University (no data)
    University of Arizona National Phenology Network (no data)
    University of Massachusetts - Amherst
    University of New Hampshire
    University of Oklahoma (no data)
    University of Vermont
    Western Connecticut State University
    Westfield State University
    Yale University, Peabody Museum