Integrated Publishing Toolkit(IPT)

free and open access to biodiversity data

WII Herbarium Dataset

最新バージョン Wildlife Institute of India によって公開 Nov 6, 2019 Wildlife Institute of India

This paper describe the herbarium dataset of the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), Dehradun, India. Altogether 4591 specimens are housed at WII herbarium, of which 4322 are digitized and published through the GBIF network. Since the inception of Wildlife Institute of India, the experts from Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) and scientists, trainees, researcher, students and herbarium staff had initiated collection of plant specimens from various protected areas distributed in all the biogeographic zones of the country. These specimens are preserved with dry preservation technique and kept in herbarium cabinets according to the Benthem & Hooker’s classification (1862-1883). The main contributors to the herbarium specimens were W.A. Rodgers, G.S. Rawat, S.S.R. Bennet, J.L. Shrivastava, Ramesh, M.M. Babu, P.L. Saklani and Parmar. The collection material is mainly utilized by the researchers and field managers from the respective protected areas of the country to prepare a checklist for Management plan. Accession of new specimens and digitization of existing ones is an ongoing process at the herbarium. It is envisaged that the herbarium will house over 2000 specimens by 2015.

データ レコード

この オカレンス(観察データと標本) リソース内のデータは、1 つまたは複数のデータ テーブルとして生物多様性データを共有するための標準化された形式であるダーウィン コア アーカイブ (DwC-A) として公開されています。 コア データ テーブルには、4,591 レコードが含まれています。

この IPT はデータをアーカイブし、データ リポジトリとして機能します。データとリソースのメタデータは、 ダウンロード セクションからダウンロードできます。 バージョン テーブルから公開可能な他のバージョンを閲覧でき、リソースに加えられた変更を知ることができます。

ダウンロード

DwC-A形式のリソース データまたは EML / RTF 形式のリソース メタデータの最新バージョンをダウンロード:

DwC ファイルとしてのデータ ダウンロード 4,591 レコード English で (195 KB) - 更新頻度: unknown
EML ファイルとしてのメタデータ ダウンロード English で (31 KB)
RTF ファイルとしてのメタデータ ダウンロード English で (22 KB)

バージョン

次の表は、公にアクセス可能な公開バージョンのリソースのみ表示しています。

引用方法

研究者はこの研究内容を以下のように引用する必要があります。:

Adhikar BS, Rawat GS, Babu MM, Saklani PL, Rawat BS, Mathur VB, Talukdar G, Vasudevan K, Chavan V, Thapa R, Pundir DS, Kumar H, Sharma V and R Sood (2011). Wildlife Institute of India Herbarium dataset. PhytoKeys.

権利

研究者は権利に関する下記ステートメントを尊重する必要があります。:

パブリッシャーとライセンス保持者権利者は Wildlife Institute of India。 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 License.

GBIF登録

このリソースをはGBIF と登録されており GBIF UUID: 9e7ea106-0bf8-4087-bb61-dfe4f29e0f17が割り当てられています。   GBIF India によって承認されたデータ パブリッシャーとして GBIF に登録されているWildlife Institute of India が、このリソースをパブリッシュしました。

キーワード

Phytosociology; Vegetation; India; National Park; Sanctuary; Tree; Shrub; Herb; Orchid; Climber; Grass; Angiosperms; Gymnoperms; Pteridophytes; Occurrence; Specimen

連絡先

リソースを作成した人:

Bhupendra Singh Adhikari
Scientist-E
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in

リソースに関する質問に答えることができる人:

Bhupendra Singh Adhikari
Scientist-E
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in

メタデータを記載した人:

Bhupendra Singh Adhikari
Scientist-E
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in

他に、リソースに関連付けられていた人:

CustodianSteward(保管者)
Gopal Singh Rawat
Scientist-G
Wildlife Institute of India Post Box. 18, Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
データ処理者
Mani Mattozhiyil Babu
Herbarium Technician
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
データ処理者
Prem Lal Saklani
Herbarium Technician
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
データ処理者
Shyam Lal
Herbarium Assistant
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
データ処理者
Birender Singh Rawat
Herbarium Assistant
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
データ配布者
V.B. Mathur
Dean
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
データ公開者
Gautam Talukdar
Scientist-C
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
データ公開者
Karthik Vasudevan
Scientist-D
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
データ公開者
Vishwas Chavan
Senior Programme Officer for DIGIT
Global Biodiversity Information Facility Universitetsparken 15, DK 2100 Copenhagen DK +45 35 32 14 75
http://www.gbif.org
データ公開者
Rajesh Thapa
System Manager
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
プログラマー
Dinesh Singh Pundir
Asstt. Programmer
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
プログラマー
Harendra Kumar
Asstt. Programmer
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
プログラマー
Virendra Sharma
Computer Personel
Wildlife Institute of India Chandrabani 248001 Dehradun Uttarakhand IN +91-1352640112
http://www.wii.gov.in
プログラマー
Rajesh Sood
Information System Analyst
Global Biodiversity Information Facility Universitetsparken 15, DK 2100 Copenhagen DK +45 35 32 14 75
http://www.gbif.org

地理的範囲

Distribution all over India. India is the seventh largest country in the world, bounded by the Indian Ocean on the south, the Arabian Sea on the west, and the Bay of Bengal on the east with coastline of 7517km. It borders Pakistan to the west; China, Nepal, and Bhutan to the north-east; and Bangladesh and Myanmar to the east, while. Sri Lanka, Maldives and Indonesia in the Indian Ocean are in close vicinity and provide the country a distinct geographical entity. The country is characterized by its diverse physical units, which includes Himalayan mountain chain; plains of river Indus, Ganga and Brahmaputra; peninsular plateau; Western ghats; Eastern ghats and the coastal plains and the Islands. In general four major river systems, the Himalayan, deccan, coastal and rivers of the inland drainage basin are there. The Himalayan rivers are generally snow-fed and flow throughout the year. During rainy and winter seasons Himalaya receives very heavy rainfall and snow fall, respectively, causes frequent floods. Maximum deccan and coastal rivers are non-perennial and generally rain-fed. The rivers of the inland drainage basin are lost somewhere in its own basin. The altitude ranges from coastal region to the highest peak Kanchenjunga (8598m asl). Despite the country's size the entire country has a tropical climate marked with relatively high temperature during summer and dry winters and seasonal rhythm of the monsoon is apparent throughout. Although, much of northern India lies beyond the tropical zone, the north-eastern region receive very heavy rainfall followed by Western Ghats and western Himalaya (>2000mm annually). However, eastern peninsula extending up to the northern plains receives rainfall between 1000 to 2000mm in a year, while the area from Western Deccan up to the Punjab plains receives rainfall between 100-500 mm a year. Parts of Run of Kachchh, Rajasthan and Trans-Himalayan region (Ladakh) have hardly any rainfall. Yearly the country has to face various kinds of natural hazards, viz., droughts, flash floods, wide spread and destructive flooding from seasonal rains, severe thunder and hail storms and earthquakes. Rodgers and Panwar (1988) divided India into 10 biogeographic zone, which were further divided into 25 biogeographic provinces considering the factors such as altitude, moisture, topography and rainfall for the planning of wildlife protected areas in India. At present there are 665 Pas in the country, of which 15.3% National Parks, 77.4% Wildlife Sanctuaries, 6.6% Conservation Reserves and 0.6% Community Reserves. Champion and Seth (1968) classified the forests of India into 6 major ecological classes depending upon their ecological functions, which are as follows: Eco class I: Tropical wet evergreen forests, Tropical semi-evergreen forests and tropical moist deciduous forests; Eco-class II: littoral and swamp forests; Eco-class III: tropical dry deciduous forests; Eco-class IV: tropical thorn forests and tropical dry evergreen forest; Eco-class V: sub-tropical broadleaved hill forests, sub-tropical pine forest and sub-tropical dry evergreen forests; and Eco-class VI: montane wet temperate forests, Himalayan moist temperate forests, Himalayan dry temperate forests, sub-alpine forests, moist alpine scrub and dry alpine scrub.

座標(緯度経度) 南 西 [8.4, 68.7], 北 東 [37.6, 97.25]

生物分類学的範囲

The coverage of this database is mainly plants from Angiosperms, Gymnosperms and Pteridophytes. The highest number of records are from the Magnoliopsida (76.72%) followed by Liliopsida (20.08%), Filicopsida (2.27%), Pinopsida (0.35%), Lycopodiopsida (0.24%), Equisetopsida (0.20%), Pteridopsida (0.09%), Polypodiopsida (0.04%) and Cycadopsida (0.02%). The highest number of records are from the family Poaceae (570) followed by Asteraceae (286), Fabaceae (267), Lamiaceae (163), Euphorbiaceae (139), Acanthaceae (137), Rosaceae (124), Rubiaceae (119), Cyperaceae (116), Scrophulariaceae (77), Verbenaceae (75), Ranunculaceae (61), Malvaceae (60), Apocynaceae (58), Mimosaceae (56), Polygonaceae, Convolvulaceae (55 each), Tiliaceae (54), Moraceae (53), Lauraceae (73) and rest of other families have individuals <50.

Kingdom  Plantae
Phylum  Equisetophyta, Lycopodiophyta, Magnoliophyta, Pinophyta, Pteridophyta
Class  Cycadopsida, Equisetopsida, Filicopsida, Liliopsida, Lycopodiopsida, Magnoliopsida, Pinopsida, Polypodiopsida, Pteridopsida
Order  Alismatales, Apiales, Arales, Arecales, Aristolochiales, Asterales, Campanulales, Capparales, Caryophyllales, Celastrales, Commelinales, Cornales, Cycadales, Cyperales, Dilleniales, Dipsacales, Ebenales, Equisetales, Ericales, Euphorbiales, Fabales, Fagales, Gentianales, Geraniales, Ginkgoales, Hamamelidales, Hydrocharitales, Hydropteridales, Juglandales, Juncales, Lamiales, Laurales, Liliales, Linales, Lycopodiales, Magnoliales, Malvales, Marattiales, Myricales, Myrtales, Najadales, Nepenthales, Nymphaeales, Ophioglossales, Orchidales, Papaverales, Pinales, Piperales, Plantaginales, Plumbaginales, Poales, Polygalales, Polygonales, Polypodiales, Primulales, Proteales, Pteridales, Ranunculales, Rhamnales, Rhizophorales, Rosales, Rubiales, Salicales, Santalales, Sapindales, Scrophulariales, Selaginellales, Solanales, Taxales, Theales, Typhales, Urticales, Violales, Zingiberales
Family  Acanthaceae, Aceraceae, Actinopteridaceae, Adiantaceae, Agavaceae, Aizoaceae, Alangiaceae, Alismataceae, Amaranthaceae, Amaryllidaceae, Anacardiaceae, Angiopteridaceae, Annonaceae, Apiaceae, Apocynaceae, Aquifoliaceae, Araceae, Araliaceae, Arecaceae , Aristolochiaceae, Asclepiadaceae, Aspleniaceae, Asteraceae, Athyriaceae, Avicinniaceae, Balsaminaceae, Bambusaceae, Barringtoniaceae, Begoniaceae, Berberidaceae, Betulaceae, Bignoniaceae, Bixaceae, Blechnaceae, Bombacaceae, Boraginaceae, Brassicaceae, Buddlejaceae, Burseraceae, Buxaceae, Caesalpiniaceae, Campanulaceae, Cannaceae, Capparidaceae, Caprifoliaceae, Carpinaceae, Caryophyllaceae, Celastraceae, Ceratophyllaceae, Chenopodiaceae, Chloranthaceae, Cleomaceae, Clusiaceae, Cochlospermaceae, Combretaceae, Commelinaceae, Connaraceae, Convolvulaceae, Coriariaceae, Cornaceae, Corylaceae, Crassulaceae, Cryptogrammataceae, Cucurbitaceae, Cupressaceae, Cuscutaceae, Cycadaceae, Cyperaceae, Davalliaceae, Dilleniaceae, Dioscoreaceae, Dipsacaceae, Dipterocarpaceae, Droseraceae, Dryopteridaceae, Ebenaceae, Ehretiaceae, Elaeocarpaceae, Elatinaceae, Eleagnaceae, Equisetaceae, Ericaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Fabaceae, Fagaceae, Flacourtiaceae, Flindersiaceae, Fumariaceae, Gentianaceae, Geraniaceae, Gesneriaceae, Ginkgoaceae, Gleicheniaceae, Grossulariaceae, Hamamelidaceae, Hernandiaceae, Hydrangeaceae, Hydrocharitaceae, Hypericaceae, Hypodematiaceae, Hypoxidaceae, Iridaceae, Juglandaceae, Juncaceae, Juncaginaceae, Lamiaceae, Lauraceae, Leeaceae, Lentibulariaceae, Liliaceae, Linaceae, Lindsaeaceae, Lobeliaceae, Loganiaceae, Lomariopsidaceae, Loranthaceae, Lycopodiaceae, Lygodiaceae, Lythraceae, Magnoliaceae, Malpighiaceae, Malvaceae, Marantaceae, Marattiaceae, Marsileaceae, Martyniaceae, Melastomataceae, Meliaceae, Menispermaceae, Mimosaceae, Moraceae, Moringaceae, Myricaceae, Myristicaceae, Myrsinaceae, Myrtaceae, Nepenthaceae, Nyctaginaceae, Olacaceae, Oleaceae, Oleandraceae, Onagraceae, Ophioglossaceae, Opiliaceae, Orchidaceae, Orobanchaceae, Osmundaceae, Oxalidaceae, Paeoniaceae, Papaveraceae, Parkeriaceae, Parnassiaceae, Passifloraceae, Pedaliaceae, Periplocaceae, Phytolaccaceae, Pinaceae, Piperaceae, Plantaginaceae, Platanaceae, Plumbaginaceae, Poaceae, Podocarpaceae, Podophyllaceae, Polemoniaceae, Polygalaceae, Polygonaceae, Polypodiaceae, Pontederiaceae, Portulacaceae, Potamogetonaceae, Primulaceae, Proteaceae, Pteridaceae, Punicaceae, Ranunculaceae, Rhamnaceae, Rhizophoraceae, Rosaceae, Rubiaceae, Rutaceae, Sabiaceae, Salicaceae, Salvadoraceae, Santalaceae, Sapindaceae, Sapotaceae, Saurauiaceae, Saururaceae, Saxifragaceae, Scrophulariaceae, Selaginellaceae, Simaroubaceae, Smilacaceae, Solanaceae, Sonneratiaceae, Sterculiaceae, Strychnaceae, Styracaceae, Symplocaceae, Tamaricaceae, Taxaceae, Tectariaceae, Theaceae, Thelipteridaceae, Thymelaeaceae, Tiliaceae, Trilliaceae, Typhaceae, Ulmaceae, Urticaceae, Valerianaceae, Verbenaceae, Violaceae, Viscaceae, Vitaceae, Zingiberaceae, Zygophyllaceae

時間的範囲

生成(収集)期間 1984-1995

プロジェクトデータ

説明がありません

タイトル Herbarium collection at Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun
ファンデイング Ministry of Environment and Forests, Paryavaran Bhawan, C.G. O. Complex, New Delhi
Study Area Description Time to time as per the need of a research on a particular topic Wildlife Institute of India had initiated projects in different parts of the country (biogeographic zones) and under those projects as per the requirement the collections were done.
研究の意図、目的、背景など(デザイン) Most of the plant specimens were collected based on their importance and at random. There was no any method for this.

プロジェクトに携わる要員:

連絡先
Bhupendra Singh Adhikari

収集方法

Representative plant samples were collected as part of surveys and ecosystem study events in various protected areas.

Study Extent Plant samples were collected from various protected areas spread across the country.
Quality Control Each herbarium sheet was entered into accession registrar once it was identified by the experts. Data from the lables on herbarium sheet was documented in MS Excel. Quality assessment and control procedures were followed for taxonomic and geocoordinate elements of the data. Catalogue of Life (www.catalogoflife.org) was used to determine the taxon hierarchy of the identified specimens. GeoLocate service was used to determine the latitude and longitude (decimal degree) of the localities. Since the localities represent large areas coordinate precision was identified as nearest minute.

コレクションデータ

コレクション名 Collection from Protected Areas of the country
コレクション識別子 WA Rodgers, GS Rawat, SSR Bennet, JL Shrivastava, Ramesh, MM Babu, PL Saklani, Parmar
Parent Collection Identifier WA Rodgers, GS Rawat, SSR Bennet, JL Shrivastava, Ramesh, MM Babu, PL Saklani, Parmar
標本保存方法 Dried and pressed

書誌情報の引用

  1. Bennet, S. S. R. 1987. Name Changes in Flowering plants of India and Adjacent Regions. Dehradun: Triseas Publishers, India.
  2. Duthei, J.F. 1903-29. Flora of the upper Gangetic Plain and of the adjacent Siwaliks and sub-Himalayan tracts. Vols. I-III. Calcutta: Govt. of India.
  3. Gaur, R.D. 1999. Flora of the District Garhwal, North West Himalaya (with ethnobotanical notes). Srinagar (Garhwal), U.P.: Trans Media, India.
  4. Gupta, R.K. 1968. Flora Nainitalensis. New Delhi: Navayug Traders.
  5. Hooker, J.D. 1887- 1897. The flora of British India. Vols. I-VII, Oxford
  6. Kanjilal, U.N. 1928. Forest flora of the Chakrata, Dehradun and Saharanpur Forest Divisions, Uttar Pradesh. (revised by Basant Lal Gupta, 3rd ed.). New Delhi: Govt. of India Press.
  7. Naithani, B.D. 1984. Flora of Chamoli Vol. I –II. Culcutta: Director, Botanical Survey of India, Howrah, India.
  8. Osmaston, A.E. 1926. A Forest Flora of Kumaon. Dehradun: Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, India.
  9. Raizada, M.B. and Saxena, H.O. 1978. Flora of Mussoorie, Vol. I. Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, Dehra Dun.
  10. Singh, K.K and Prakash, A. 2002. Flora of Rajaji National Park, Uttaranchal. Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, Dehradun.
  11. Dietrich Brandis. 1987. Indian Trees. Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, Dehradun.
  12. Mathew, K.M. 1983. The Flora of the Tamilnadu Carnatic Vol I-III, The Rapinant Herbarium, St. Joseph’s College, Thiruchirapally, Tanil Nadu.
  13. Gamble, J.S. 1984. Flora of the Presidency of Madras Vol I-III, Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, Dehradun.
  14. Fyson, P.F. 1986. The Flora of the South Indian Hill Stations, Periodical Expert Book Agency, Vivek Vihar, Delhi.
  15. Maheswari, J.K. 1983. Illustrations to the Flora of Delhi, CSIR, New Delhi
  16. Babu, C.R. 1977. Herbaceous Flora of Dehradun, Uttar Pradesh, CSIR, New Delhi.
  17. Singh, K.K. 1997. Flora of Dudhwa National Park, Kheri District, Uttar Pradesh, Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, Dehradun
  18. Bor, N.L. 1960. The grasses of Burma, Ceylon, India and Pakistan (excluding Bambuseae) Pergamon Press, Oxford.
  19. Polunin O. and Stainton, A. 1984. Flowers of the Himalaya. Oxford University Press, Delhi.
  20. Rodgers, W.A. and Panwar, H.S. (1988). Planning a wildlife protected area network in India. 2 vols. Project FO: IND/82/003. FAO, Dehra Dun. 339, 267 pp.
  21. Champion, H. G., and S. K. Seth. 1968. A Revised Survey of the Forest Types of India. Manager of Publications, Government of India, New Delhi.
  22. Lawrence, G. H. M. 1951. Taxonomy of Vascular Plants. The Macmillan Company, New York.

追加のメタデータ

目的 Preparation of checklist of protected areas for management plan writing and for ecological studies.
代替識別子 9e7ea106-0bf8-4087-bb61-dfe4f29e0f17
https://ibif.gov.in:8443/ipt/resource?r=wii1