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INTERNET RESOURCESBotany: Putting names and faces to botany informationC&RL News, June 2000 by Lori Bronars and Anne Prestamo The following annotated list of Internet sites for botany is aimed at common information needs of librarians or library users, from undergraduates to professionals.1 Gateways and metasites • Scott’s Botanical Links. Including more than 3,000 links, this site features both searchable and browsable gateways. Categories include: databases, multimedia experiences, illustrations, systematics, and Web resources. Access: http://www.ou.edu/cas/botany-micro/bot-linx/subject/. • Green Links. A specialized gateway with browsable categories including marine biology, rainforests, tropical biology, databases, a world map of botany sites, software, and species names. Access: • PlantFacts Search Engine. Created and maintained by the staff of Horticulture and Crop Science in Virtual Perspective at Ohio State University, this resource includes two databases. The “Factsheet Database” contains guides for answering plant-related questions from 46 universities and government institutions across the U.S. and Canada. Links are provided to more than 20,000 pages of Extension fact sheets and bulletins that provide a concentrated source of plant-related information. The “Research and Teaching” database provides links to more than 20,000 pages from 40 American university departments related to admissions, degree requirements, career opportunities, research projects, and online courses. Access: http://plantfacts.ohio-state.edu/. Arboreta and gardens • Kew Web. The official Web site for the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew provides information on collections, research, and publications. Includes the searchable databases “Vascular Plant Families” and “Genera and Authors of Plant Names.” The site also contains a five-source compilation of data on the amounts of nuclear DNA in seed plant species. Access: http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/. • Missouri Botanical Garden. Visitor information on the garden’s arboretum is plentiful at this site. The library’s catalog and the “w3TROPICOS” (Vascular Tropicos) database of plant names are searchable. Access: http://www.mobot.org/; Access: http://mobot.mobot.org/Pick/Search/pick.html (“w3TROPICOS”). • Morton Arboretum and Sterling Morton Library. The section on plant information and collections includes e-mail reference service. Questions are answered by a librarian. Access: http://www.mortonarb.org/. • U.S. National Arboretum. Includes the latest USDA Hardiness Zone Map showing lowest recorded temperatures for the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. Access: http://www.ars-grin.gov/ars/Beltsville/na/. Societies, organizations, and museums • Natural History Museum, London. On this e-mail reference service choose “Enquiries” from the drop-down box; on the Museum Enquiries Page, scroll down to Science enquiries. Users can search the Library Catalog and the Picture Library. This site contains nearly 600 images (mostly art reproductions) of plants and flowers. Access: http://www.nhm.ac.uk/. • Harvard University Herbaria. Featuring the Herbaria’s 5 millionth specimen, this site also provides links to other large plant collection sites, numerous searchable databases, descriptions of its collections, research, publications, and visitor information. The Farlow Reference Library of Cryptogamic Botany section provides e-mail reference service. The Databases section contains an extensive list of the world’s most endangered mosses and liverworts. Access: http://www.herbaria.harvard.edu/. • Swedish Museum of Natural History. The “Biologist-on-call” provides e-mail reference service. The Plants section contains images, searchable databases, and other descriptions of collections and information on collectors. (Some in Swedish only.) The Seed plants section contains 2,000+ images from Carl Linnaeus’ herbarium. Access: http://www.nrm.se/welcome.html.en. • U.S. Department of Agriculture. Providing information about USDA’s many programs, services, and agencies, the National Agricultural Library also offers free searching of Agricola (1970– ). In the Agencies section, choose “Forest Service” to access the Climate Change Atlas for 80 Tree Species of the Eastern U.S. In the Hot Topics section, choose “Biotechnology Overview” and “Research” for reports on genetically engineered crops. Access: http://www.usda.gov/; Access: http://www.nal.usda.gov/ag98 (Free Agricola). Images • The Virtual Foliage Home Page. Developed and maintained by Michael Clayton, Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin-Madison, this site provides links to thousands of plant pictures. Access: http://www.wisc.edu/botany/virtual.html. • Agronomy & Horticulture 100 (AgHrt 100) Plant Images. Created and maintained by the Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, Brigham Young University, this site includes a JPEG gallery of approximately 150 economically important plants. Images may be used for noncommercial purposes. Access: http://ucs.byu.edu/bioag/aghort/aghort100/images.htm. • Smithsonian Catalog of Botanical Illustration. More than 500 images of Bromelaciae, Cactaceae, and Melastomataceae by early to mid-20th century artists are available. The collection will eventually grow to 3,000 images. Images are copyrighted by the Smithsonian. Supported by a grant from the Atherton Seidell Endowment Fund, this resource was developed by Larry Dorr, Ellen Farr, and Alice Tangerini. Access: http://nmnhwww.si.edu/botart/. • The Botanic Sorting Machine. This aesthetically pleasing gateway provides access to thousands of plant images. Plant names are in Latin, English, and Dutch. Other pages provide information and images of the Suriname Rainforest. Created by Marco Bleeker in Amsterdam (Netherlands), this site is mirrored on servers in the U.S., Japan, Canada, and Russia. Access: http://www.euronet.nl/users/mbleeker/folis/bsmain-e.html; Access: http://www.euronet.nl/users/mbleeker/suriname/suri-eng.html (Suriname Rainforest). • The National Plant Photographic Index. The Australian National Botanic Gardens provides a large collection of photographic slides of identified Australian plant species. It also features environmental and conservation images. Access: http://www.anbg.gov.au/anbg/photo.html. • Flora of Europe—a Photographic Herbaria. Flora of Europe is an amateur photo-herbarium, established in 1997. It contains approximately 660 pictures of flowers, mostly of southern Europe. There are 284 species (63 families, 179 genera). Access: http://utopia.knoware.nl/users/aart/index.html. Checklists and floras • Checklist of Online Vegetation and Plant Distribution Maps. Compiled by Claire Englander (University Herbarium, University of California, Berkeley) and Philip Hoehn (Branner Earth Sciences Library and Map Collections, Stanford University), this site is arranged by area, world or continent, and subdivided by region or country name. Access: http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/branner/vegmaps.htm. • Flora of North America. More than 800 scientists at 30 institutions are collaborating on this project to provide information on the plants that “grow outside of cultivation” north of Mexico (21,000 species). Entries are signed and include physical descriptions, numbers of genera and species, distribution, and literature references. Online records can be searched by province, elevation, name, or other text word. This resource is related to the printed volumes of the same title, being published by Oxford University Press. Access: http://hua.huh.harvard.edu/FNA/. • Global Plant Checklist Project. The International Organization for Plant Information (IOPI) has identified this project as a top priority. The Global Plant Checklist, encompassing about 300,000 vascular plant species and more than 1 million names, will serve as a taxonomic backbone to which users can append more specialized information. Eventually the Checklist will also include nonvascular plants. IOPI calls this a “work in progress,” lacking the refinements envisaged for the fully relational Checklist when funds are available. Access: http://iopi.csu.edu.au/iopi/iopigpc1.html. • Carnivorous Plant Database. From Rick Walker, HP Labs in Palo Alto, California, this site provides nomenclature information and images of carnivorous plants that can be retrieved via the searchable database. Access: http://www.hpl.hp.com/bot/cp_home. Ethnobotany
• Dr. Duke’s Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases. This project, of James A. Duke and Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, is housed at the USDA’s National Germplasm Resources Laboratory. Resources include: Economic botany • AgNIC Home Page. AgNIC (Agriculture Network Information Center) is a distributed network of agriculture-related information, subject area experts, and other resources. It was established by an alliance of the National Agricultural Library, land-grant universities, and other organizations committed to facilitating public access to agricultural and related information. Access: http://www.agnic.org/. • EnviroPlants Research. Information on the Technical and Economical Efficiencies of Producing, Marketing, and Managing Environmental Plants is available at this site. It contains a comprehensive • Forage Information System. From David Hannaway, Department of Crop & Soil Science, Oregon State University, this site is a global forage information resource. It also contains a glossary of forage-related terms. Access: http://forages.orst.edu/; Access: http://forages.orst.edu/main.cfm?PageID=60 (Glossary). • ForestWorld. Categories at this site include news and views, databases and directories, certification and sustainability, forest industry, Internet directory, woods of the world, photo gallery, and marketplace. Access: http://www.forestworld.com/. Higher plants • Tree Conservation Information Service. The World Conservation Monitoring Centre holds data on more than 7,000 tree species of global conservation concern. Conservation assessments (including IUCN Red List category) have been gathered from many sources. This resource is continuously updated. Access: http://www.wcmc.org.uk/cgi-bin/SaCGI.cgi/trees.exe. • Atlas Florae Europaeae. Edited by Jaakko Jalas, Juha Suominen, Raino Lampinen, and Arto Kurtto and published by the Committee for Mapping the Flora of Europe and Societas Biologica Fennica Vanamo. The atlas shows European distribution of species and subspecies. Ranges are mapped in grids of 50-km squares, totaling 4,419 squares for Europe. Notes list synonyms, taxonomy and nomenclature data, important additions and corrections (mainly complementing Flora Europaea), and references to maps of the total range. Access: http://www.helsinki.fi/kmus/afe.html. • CalFlora. CalFlora is a comprehensive database of plant distribution for California. A joint project of USDA Forest Service, UC Berkeley Digital Library Project, USGS, UC Davis Information Center for the Environment, Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, and others, its components include: • The Arabidopsis Information Resource (TAIR). Funded by the National Science Foundation, this site is a resource for genomic data on Arabidopsis thaliana. Some information is from the former “Arabidopsis thaliana Database” (AtDB), which was maintained by Stanford University’s Medical School, Department of Genetics. Access: • Gray Card Index. Maintained by K. N. Gandhi (Harvard University Herbaria), the Gray Card Index provides taxonomic information on New World vascular plants. Access: http://www.herbaria.harvard.edu/Data/Gray/. • Information and Education, Ohio Division of Forestry. This site, from Bill Schultz, program administrator, provides information on Ohio forestry and includes a forestry acronym key to more than 100 acronyms. Access: http://www.hcs.ohio-state.edu/ODNR/Education/Educate.htm. • International Plant Names Index. This effort is a collaboration between the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Harvard University Herbaria, and Australian National Herbarium. The aim of this database is to supply, for all known flowering plants, the scientific name and literature cite to the recorded discovery. Access: http://www.ipni.org/. Lower plants • Bryophytes. A project of Raymond E. Stotler and Barbara J. Crandall-Stotler, Department of Plant Biology,
• A Cumulative Checklist for the Lichen-forming, Lichenicolous and Allied Fungi of the Continental United States and Canada. Created by Theodore L. Esslinger, Department of Botany, North Dakota State University, this site contains cumulative updates to the most recently published North American checklist by Esslinger and Egan (1995). It corresponds to Esslinger’s most current Recent Literature on Lichens for the Bryologist. Access: http://www.ndsu.nodak.edu/instruct/esslinge/chcklst/chcklst7.htm. • CyanoSite. This extensive cyanobac-terial bibliography is provided by Mark A. Schneegurt, Environmental and Industrial Microbiology, University of Notre Dame. It contains more than 6,700 references that can be imported into bibliographic management programs. The site also contains a gallery of 200+ images and videos of cyanobacteria. Access: http://www-cyanosite.bio.purdue.edu/. • The Harmful Algae Page. Supported by an NSF/NOAA grant to the National Office for Marine Biotoxins and Harmful Algal Blooms at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, this site contains an introduction to algal blooms and “red tides,” a photo gallery, a listing of species responsible for harmful algal blooms, and a distribution map. Access: http://www.redtide.whoi.edu/hab/. • Algal Journal Articles Databases. Most issues of Botanica Marina, British/European Journal of Phycology, Journal of Phycology, Phycologia, and Proceedings of the International Seaweed Symposia are available here. Access: http://seaweed.ucg.ie/search/Searchchoice.html. Miscellaneous
• The Botanical Collectors Database. The database provides information on plant collectors and may be downloaded. It is a collaboration of the California Academy of Sciences, Field Museum of Natural History, Harvard University Herbaria, Missouri Botanical Garden, New York Botanical Garden, and Smithsonian Institution. Entries are provided for individual collectors as well as for collecting teams. Access: http://herbaria.harvard.edu/Data/Collectors/. • Why Leaves Change Color. This site is provided by the USDA Forest Service, St. Paul Field office. Access: http://willow.ncfes.umn.edu/leaves/leaves.htm. Note About the Authors |
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