TY - JOUR
T1 - High-quality herbarium-label transcription by citizen scientists improves taxonomic and spatial representation of the tropical plant family Annonaceae
AU - Streiff, Serafin J. R.
AU - Ravomanana, Erica O.
AU - Rakotoarinivo, Mijoro
AU - Pignal, Marc
AU - Pimpare, Eva P. E. R. E. Z.
AU - Erkens, Roy H. J.
AU - Couvreur, Thomas L. P.
PY - 2024/11/4
Y1 - 2024/11/4
N2 - Herbarium specimens provide an important and central resource for biodiversity research. Making these records digitally available to end-users represents numerous challenges, in particular, transcribing metadata associated with specimen labels. In this study, we used the citizen science initiative ‘Les Herbonautes' and the Récolnat network to transcribe specific data from all herbarium specimen labels stored at the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle in Paris of the large tropical plant family Annonaceae. We compared this database with publicly available global biodiversity repository data and expert checklists. We investigated spatial and taxonomic advances in data availability at the global and country scales. A total of 20 738 specimens were transcribed over the course of more than two years contributing to and significantly extending the previously available specimen and species data for Annonaceae worldwide. We show that several regions, mainly in Africa and South East Asia not covered by online global datasets, are uniquely available in the P herbarium, probably linked to past history of the museum's botanical exploration. While acknowledging the challenges faced during the transcription of historic specimens by citizen scientists, this study highlights the positive impact of adding records to global datasets both in space and time. This is illustrative for researchers, collection managers, policy makers as well as funders. These datasets will be valuable for numerous future studies in biodiversity research, including ecology, evolution, conservation and climate change science.
AB - Herbarium specimens provide an important and central resource for biodiversity research. Making these records digitally available to end-users represents numerous challenges, in particular, transcribing metadata associated with specimen labels. In this study, we used the citizen science initiative ‘Les Herbonautes' and the Récolnat network to transcribe specific data from all herbarium specimen labels stored at the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle in Paris of the large tropical plant family Annonaceae. We compared this database with publicly available global biodiversity repository data and expert checklists. We investigated spatial and taxonomic advances in data availability at the global and country scales. A total of 20 738 specimens were transcribed over the course of more than two years contributing to and significantly extending the previously available specimen and species data for Annonaceae worldwide. We show that several regions, mainly in Africa and South East Asia not covered by online global datasets, are uniquely available in the P herbarium, probably linked to past history of the museum's botanical exploration. While acknowledging the challenges faced during the transcription of historic specimens by citizen scientists, this study highlights the positive impact of adding records to global datasets both in space and time. This is illustrative for researchers, collection managers, policy makers as well as funders. These datasets will be valuable for numerous future studies in biodiversity research, including ecology, evolution, conservation and climate change science.
KW - Annonaceae
KW - participatory transcription
KW - GBIF
KW - conservation
KW - ecology
KW - Madagascar
KW - DIGITIZATION
KW - MADAGASCAR
KW - SPECIMENS
KW - CONSERVATION
KW - HISTORY
U2 - 10.5252/adansonia2024v46a18
DO - 10.5252/adansonia2024v46a18
M3 - Article
SN - 1280-8571
VL - 46
SP - 173
EP - 186
JO - Adansonia
JF - Adansonia
IS - 18
ER -