Archive by Author | mwdenslow

NitFix Appreciation and Update

We wanted to take a moment to thank all that have helped with the NitFix expeditions. There has been a fantastic response to this project on Notes from Nature. The 5th expedition is currently at 17% complete and four expeditions have finished so far with over 15,000 transcriptions already completed!

Today there are researchers from the NitFix team collecting more samples at the Missouri Botanical Garden herbarium for analysis. This is one of the largest herbaria in the world with over 6.6 million specimens. To date the NitFix team has had 90% sequencing success meaning that they have been able to get genetic sequences from 90% of the samples collected. That is a really good considering that all of these samples have come from herbarium specimens as opposed to fresh plant tissue.

We expect about 6 more expeditions to come in the future as the NitFix team continues this ambitions project. You can continue to follow progress at the NitFix website and on Twitter @Nit_Fix

East Coast Versus West Coast Transcription Battle

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We are co-launching simultaneously two new expeditions that are part of our “Understanding A Critical Symbiosis: Nitrogen Fixing in Plants” series. These new expeditions are a departure from the previous ones as we are only asking for a subset of typical fields. This subset are almost all “drop down” fields, with one exception, and generally cover “higher geography” such as country, state and county, along with date. For our East Coast entrant (the New York Botanical Garden), we are also asking for “verbatim scientific name” as it is written on the label, because this is useful for curator purposes at the Garden and may differ from what we have recorded.

Our West Coast entrant is the California Academy of Sciences herbarium, who were kind enough to host us for three weeks in January for a marathon effort to sample herbarium sheets.  Our worked focused on the very strong collections of nitrogen fixers from Mexico and Central America.  

So its East Versus West in an epic transcription battle!  We’ll update how each expedition is doing in terms of weekly effort and see who will get the crown.  

Finally a very quick update that we are motoring through extracting DNA from all our samples, and have had excellent success so far getting DNA from most of our samples.  We’ll have more to report about sequencing efforts, which are now underway, in a follow-up post.

Rob Guralnick and Ryan Folk, Florida Museum of Natural History

Notes from Nature and the Florida Museum Launch the ‘Take a Note for Earth Day’ campaign

It’s Earth Day again! To celebrate, we are launching “Take a Note for Earth Day” in collaboration with the Florida Museum of Natural History.

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From April 20 – 22, we are encouraging people to do one transcription and post about it on social media using the hashtag #TakeANote. In the time it takes to order a cup of coffee, you can help scientists document life on our planet!

We will be releasing a few expeditions leading up to the weekend​, and on Sunday, there will be a special expedition available to people who drop by the Florida Museum between 1 and 5 p.m. Participants will have an opportunity to talk to botanists, see museum specimens and get a Notes from Nature sticker for helping out.

So, order a cup of coffee and do one transcription, and don’t forget to post about it on social media!  #TakeANote

Thank You! Meet Our (MGCL) Sack-bearer Moths, aka Poop-house Caterpillars!

Thank you for your work on the Mixed Bag of Specimens from the McGuire Center! It was amazing to see this expedition finish in a short amount of time. We have another grab bag of specimens for you to transcribe. But before transcribing read about some of the moths you will be transcribing, thanks to graduate student Ryan St. Laurent.

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Throughout the Americas, but especially in the rainforests and savannahs of Latin America, live a peculiar family of moths called Mimallonidae. These moths are colloquially known as “Sack-bearers,” a name derived from their strange caterpillars which make open-ended shelters that are unlike any other constructed by butterflies and moths. These shelters are made of frass (poop), silk, and plant material; the caterpillars drag around their funny houses much like a hermit crab carries its shell. Sack-bearer caterpillars have evolved specialized bodies adapted to living inside these shelters, their heads and butts are tough and shield-like, so they can stuff either end of their bodies in either opening of their house, preventing unwanted intruders from entering. While these shelters usually appear mostly to be made of leaves and silk, the frass is interwoven into the shelter, providing structure and rigidity. The frass pellets are actually used much like little bricks. Maybe these moths are more accurately called Poop-house Caterpillars, rather than Sack-bearers? Relative to many other moth families, the Poop-house caterpillar family is not particularly diverse, with only about 300 species total. Despite the low number of species, and restricted distribution, Mimallonidae are an interesting piece of the overall evolutionary puzzle of Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths). From recent studies that examined the DNA of many families of Lepidoptera, it has become increasingly clear that Mimallonidae share a common ancestor with a globally distributed group of moths that also happens to be the most diverse in terms of number of species. Does this mean that the ancestor of most moths that are alive today was like a Poop-house caterpillar, and not like a typical caterpillar that you might find in your garden? Therefore, it seems that studying Mimallonidae will help researchers unravel the evolutionary history of butterflies and moths more broadly. This Notes from Nature expedition, which includes moths of this fascinating family, will be the first attempt to digitize and transcribe labels of an entire Mimallonidae collection, setting the stage for countless studies on Mimallonidae and Lepidoptera more broadly, by making images and data of hundreds of these specimens available to researchers around the world.

— Stacey L. Huber, Digitization Coordinator, McGuire Center for Lepidoptera & Biodiversity, Florida Museum of Natural History

Help NYBG solve history’s botanical mysteries! New Labs Expedition: “US State Spotter”

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The New York Botanical Garden Herbarium is pleased to launch its latest Notes From Nature project, “US State Spotter”, designed to uncover occurrence data from some of our oldest specimens from North America. As a participant, your focused mission is to help identify the correct US State where each plant specimen was found in the wild by interpreting clues from the original collection label.

This new expedition features a simplified workflow with easy-to-follow instructions, and should be a great introduction for those who have never tried interpreting scientific specimens before. That’s not to say this expedition will be easy! We suspect even veteran transcribers will enjoy a surprising challenge, since most specimens we are targeting feature old and handwritten collection labels. This is no coincidence, since we developed “US State Spotter” specifically to address persistent gaps in the sampling of older collections by crowdsourcing projects.

In the spirit of discovery, I hope you’ll help us classify these cryptic specimens so we can connect researchers to essential biodiversity data and build even more interesting and comprehensive virtual expeditions for the citizen science community!

Click here to join expedition Part 4 “Reclusive Rosaceae” More State Spotter expeditions coming soon!

— Charles Zimmerman, New York Botanical Garden Herbarium, czimmerman@nybg.org

A Huge Thank You with More to Come!

First off thank you so much for taking the time to help transcribe the “Banded Yellow Butterfly” expedition. This expedition was challenging, but you persisted and that shows the amount of care you have for helping natural history collections. Thank you also for providing comments and suggestions. They have been noted and where possible incorporated in to this next expedition for a smoother transcription experience. That being said, let me introduce you to our new expedition “Mixed Bag of Specimens” from the McGuire Center.

The McGuire Center for Lepidoptera and Biodiversity at the Florida Museum of Natural of History is home to one of the largest Lepidoptera collections in the world. Since the opening of the center in 2004, it is has grown rapidly and now has nearly 10 million specimens. The McGuire Center was founded by combining collections from the Allyn Museum (then located in Sarasota, Florida) and the Lepidoptera holdings of the Florida State Collection of Arthropods. While students and staff are constantly contributing to the collection, its growth is primarily due to donations from private collections.

With such big and vast collection, digitizing has taken place on all three floors of collections and with all different species. In this expedition, you will find a mixed bag of specimens to transcribe. All specimens are moths, but there are different species and various layouts. Don’t be discouraged, the information you seek is there.

As you know transcribing this data is extremely important part of the digitization effort. Thank you for taking the time to help! The information that you transcribe is essential to our ongoing research. It enhances data sets and helps answer questions about the history and behavior of these moths and butterflies. We value your contributions to the scientific community, and we thank you for devoting your time and effort to help us complete these butterfly projects.

— Stacey L. Huber, McGuire Center for Lepidoptera & Biodiversity, Florida Museum of Natural History

Tennessee Invaders

There are almost 500 non-native plants that now call Tennessee home. These plants threaten native Tennessee ecosystems. Detection and monitoring, of these species present tremendous challenges to conservation groups. As a first line of defense, organizations such as the Tennessee Invasive Plant Council (TN-IPC) work to list and rank non-native species. Up until recently, organizations such as these have relied heavily on expert opinion and experience to rank non-native species. However, with the onset of metadata technology, the ability to access large amounts of information has transformed the ways in which we might enhance our understanding of the threat non-native species pose across the landscape.

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Elaeagnus umbellata (Autumn Olive) Photo by M.W. Denslow https://flic.kr/p/GFRQgA

This expedition will assist University of Tennessee at Chattanooga graduate student Courtney Alley (@Calley2012) in collecting data for her thesis research that will utilize this advancement in technology to further our understanding of non-native plant species.  Ultimately, this information will be used to map the locations of these invasive plant species and eventually determine a pattern of spread throughout the state.  With your help, we can use these data to develop more effective detection and monitoring techniques for non-native plants!

— The NfN Team

 

Phenology of evening primrose

Oenothera are the evening primroses, or sundrops, and are so named for their tendency to open cheery, long-lasting yellow flowers during the evening. There are about 145 species of evening primrose spread across the New World, where they have long be a cultivated species. One species, Oenothera biennis, is common across eastern and central North America, and has a long history of medicinal use. Much of the plant is edible and the oil for primrose has long been used a traditional medicine.

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Evening primose plants (white flowers) are often dominant in sandy areas. Photo by mwdenslow

Evening primrose is pollinated by a special set of bee and moth pollinators with specialized ability to handle its more viscous pollen strands, and its seeds are eaten by birds such as finches. Evening primroses are not related to other primroses in the genus Primula, which are in a different family.  

While diurnal patterns of flower opening and closing is a form of phenology, we are interested here in the seasonal patterns of evening primrose blooming, and especially if climatic changes are impacting evening primrose cycles. We are especially interested in both spring and fall timing since many in this species can have two generation of plants per year.  

We are really excited to launch the Evening Primrose Phenology project as out first truly mobile-friendly Notes from Nature project. We are just looking for help with documenting flower presence, so a simple “yes it has flowers” or “no it doesn’t” suffices.

Its so easy to try one – we hope you do!

Pollinator Plants of Virginia II

Welcome to another edition of the Plants of Virginia expeditions – Pollinator Plants of Virginia II.  In this project, we have assembled a range of species from predominantly animal-pollinated plant families including the Sunflower, Mint, Tomato, Blueberry, Carrot, Coffee and Apple families, all of which provide food for humans, too. Pollinator populations and their overall health have declined in recent decades. While much current research is necessarily focused on the health of non-native, domesticated honey-bees and agricultural productivity, thousands of other invertebrate pollinators such as bumble-bees, small solitary bees, butterflies and moths are in need of help, too. In order for researchers to find these small creatures in the wild to monitor their population sizes or to test them for diseases, they must first locate the food plants that are preferred by each pollinator and wait for their research subjects to appear. Many native pollinator species will consume the pollen or nectar of very few plant species; this very choosy feeding behavior is called oligolecty. It also means that these species can die out if their food plants disappear.  By transcribing these herbarium records, you help us develop very fine scale maps of the plants’ locations and flowering times, which can be used by pollinator researchers to find their quarry.

 

Andrea Weeks, Director, Ted R. Bradley Herbarium, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia