Vascular Plant Herbarium

Arizona State University
Home Strengths Outreach Projects Personnel


Outreach Activities of the ASU Vascular Plant Herbarium

One of the primary goals of the ASU herbarium is to increase public access to our vast amount of data and resources. Web-based tools have proven an excellent way to accomplish this. All of the pages are continually added to and upgraded.

Collections database: http://seinet.asu.edu/seinet/collections/index.jsp

The ASU collections database is available on the World Wide Web along with other biological databases at the Southwestern Natural History Databases site. The collections database is searchable by taxon, collector, collection number, and location keyword. Records include collections data and images (when available). Records for threatened and endangered plants do not show locality data, but interested researchers can contact the curator for information on those records. Records that include latitude/longitude information can be mapped by clicking the "map" tab.

Vascular Plant Image Library: http://seinet.asu.edu/seinet/imageLibrary/index.php

More than 10,000 images of scanned herbarium sheets and photos are searchable by scientific or common name. Each herbarium sheet appears life-sized on the screen, and higher resolution close-ups of fertile parts are included for some taxa. One representative herbarium sheet of each species growing wild in the Phoenix area has been scanned, and we are in the process of scanning a representative of every species growing wild in Arizona.

SALIX (Semi-automatic label information extraction system) SALIX.pdf
The goals of SALIX are to capture herbarium specimen label data with the use of optical character recognition technologies and transfer those data into a database.

Checklist database: Arizona Checklists or Teaching Checklists

Twenty-one Arizona regional checklists are searchable by scientific and common name. Areas currently included are: Arizona, ASU Campus, Buckeye Hills Recreational Area, Camp Creek, Hassyampa River Preserve, Lake Pleasant Regional Park, McDowell Mountains Regional Park, Papago Park, Phoenix Flora (cultivated plants), Phoenix Flora (native plants), San Tan Mountain Semi-Regional Park, Seven Springs area (Tonto National Forest), Sierra Ancha Wilderness Area (Tonto National Forest), Sierra Estrella Mountains Regional Park, South Mountain Park, Superstition Mountains Wilderness Area (Tonto National Forest), Thunderbird Semi-Regional Park, Upper San Pedro River, Usery Mountains Semi Regional Park, West Fork of Oak Creek (Coconino National Forest), and White Tank Mountains Regional Park. When available, images are included. Systematic checklists include lists for Arizona Trees & Shrubs, Miscellaneous American Myrtaceae, and Neotropical Systematics.

Making Custom Checklists: http://seinet.asu.edu/seinet/collections/index.jsp
Suppose you would like to have a checklist of plants from a particular area or county. You can create a custom checklist from the collections database. First, check the checkboxes for one or more vascular plant herbarium databases, ASU, U of A, NAU, and Desert Botanical Garden. Then, under "Locality Criteria," type Arizona in the state space, and one of the counties (e.g., Maricopa) in the county space. Searching with just these conditions will give you a county checklist. You may also make a checklist based on key words, such as "Snow Bowl" or "Schnebly Hill" or "Sycamore Creek." If you do not also designate a county, then you may get specimens from more than one "Sycamore Creek," as there happen to be a few in Arizona. If you wish to search multiple counties or multiple keywords, be sure to separate the criteria with a semicolon. For example, if you want to see all of the plants from Mohave and Yavapai counties, type in "Mohave; Yavapai." If you wish to see all of the specimens from Schnebly Hill or Sedona, type in "Schnebly Hill; Sedona." You may also designate an area based on coordinates, but keep in mind some specimens may not have georeference coordinates. The next step is to query the databases for all the specimens in the designated county or with the designated keywords etc. This is done by clicking on "SEARCH" at the bottom of the page. Wait a few moments and a list of specimens will appear. At the top of the page you can click on the tab that says "checklist" and convert the specimens into a checklist organized by family. You may insert a name in the Taxonomic Keyword Criteria under genus name. This allows you to limit your search to Brickellia of Schnebly Hill, for instance. You may also create a family checklist for a particular locality. For example, if you would like to see all of the Brassicaceae from Yuma County, enter "Brassicaceae" in the taxonomic criteria box, and "Yuma" in the county box. Be sure to checkmark the box that says "Use AZ Taxonomic Thesaurus" for this type of search.

Particular Taxon Search: under contruction
From this page, you can search for plants by scientific or common name. Search results are displayed as a list. Clicking on a name in the list will take you to taxonomic data and images (when available) for that plant.

Making Distribution Maps Online: http://seinet.asu.edu/collections/selection_map.jsp

From this page, you can compare the distributions of two taxa on the same map. Different background layers (rivers, ecological communities, etc.) can be turned on and off during your analysis. Hover over the dots and more information is displayed for individual specimens.

Myrtaceae Types Image Page: http://lifesciences.asu.edu/landrum/myrttypes.html

Making Packets for Herbarium Specimens: http://lifesciences.asu.edu/packet.html

This page shows the steps in making a packet for extra loose material to be held on an herbarium sheet.

Making Specimens: http://askabiologist.asu.edu/profiles/landrum/index.html

This website shows the steps in making a scientifically useful herbarium specimen.

Other Efforts:

Other outreach efforts include our participation in the SEE ASU! program, in which school children tour research laboratories on campus. Additionally, the ASU herbarium is a regular stop for "University Sneaker Tours" in which community business-people tour ASU facilities 2-3 times a year. We are also regularly consulted to contribute to the "Ask a Biologist" page operated by ASU's Life Science Visualization Group as an educational resource for students K-12 and their teachers.

©2006 Arizona State University | Revised 9 July 2008
PageMaster | ASU Privacy Statement | Accessibility | Copyright