plant names: obstacles and solutions to access information about plants

19
Plant names: obstacles and solutions Bob Allkin, Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, UK to accessing information about plants

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Page 1: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Plant names:

obstacles and solutions

Bob Allkin, Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, UK

to accessing information about plants

Page 2: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Talk structure

1. What is a scientific plant name?

2. Names as obstacles to accessing data

3. Examples of impact

4. Resources / standards available

5. New integrating initiatives

6. Moving forward – what are your needs?

Page 3: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

a) Genus name (in Latin)

b) Species name (in Latin)

c) Author e.g. “Hocus pocus Bob”

d) Publication must follow:International Code of Botanical Nomenclature (ICBN)

• include a diagnostic description of plant (in latin)• cites “type” specimen(s) - fixes identity of name for eternity• respect priority of existing names

Beware: the Code evolves!• established 1753; revised every 6 yrs: Tokyo 1996; St Louis 2000; Vienna 2006

What is a scientific name?

Page 4: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Q1: How many plants are there?• New plants being discovered

(4 to 6K scientific names published / yr)

• No authoritative central referencec. 0.35 million flowering plants (one botanists educated guess)

Q2: How many names are there?• > 1.5 million scientific plant names published• > 4 million “names” incl. common misspellings

i.e. lots more names than plants!

Page 5: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Structural Obstacles1. Most plants have many names (synonyms)

2. The same binomial may be published by different authors (“Hocus pocus Bob” & “Hocus pocus John”) who refer to different plants (homonyms)

3. Names used in literature often refer to wrong plant (misapplied names)

i.e. One plant may have many names& One name may refer to many plants

Page 6: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Avoidable Obstacles:

1. Plant name authors are abbreviated in different ways – there IS a standard

2. “Noise” increases as names are copieda. New errors introducedb. Existing errors replicated

3. Information published about a plant cannot be verified unless specimen(s) are cited

Page 7: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Saussurea costus (Falc.) Lips. has a root widely used in medicine – imported to EU

So what does it look like?.... Google it!

Page 8: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

51 PubMed Records

215

GenBank Records

Searching with Accepted name

Page 9: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Searching witha synonym

03 PubMed Records

14

GenBank Records

Page 10: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Conclusions1. Do not expect to find all information that

is published using just one name across the internet or within a single information source

2. You will have to work hard to find all synonyms of a given plant

Page 11: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Examples of impact EU Health authority publish legislation (re herbal & poisonous plants)

Several either meaningless (non existent names)or ambiguous (homonyms)

US & Japanese health authority lists: 20% plants names do not exist. 5%: plants recorded more than once – under different names.

World Bank funds multimillion $ forestry programme in NE Brazil local tree (“Ziziphus joazeiro Mart.”) has exciting potential 3 different species grown in the plots!

World Conservation Monitoring Centre (IUCN) maintain database70% of maintenance costs relate to entering, checking and reviewing plant names and distributions.

Page 12: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Q1: Does name “Hocus pocus” exist?Q2: How should it be written?Q3: Where can I find the original publication?Q4: Do any homonyms exist?Q5: Who is/are the authors?

International Plant Name Index http://www.ipni.org

Available resources / standards:1) Nomenclators

> Kew + Harvard + Australian Botanical Inst> 1.5 million published plant names (>96%)> 37,000 authors > 15,000 publications

Target audience – systematists, db compilers

Page 13: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants
Page 14: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Q1: What is the “accepted name” of this plant ? Q2: Are names ‘x’ and ‘y’ synonymous?Q3: How many plants are in this genus?Q4: How many plants are in this country?Q5: List all synonyms for this plant?

coherent authoritative global list of plants (e.g. in a family) consensus index to ALL relevant names resolves synonymy provides further information e.g. geographical distribution, uses, etc

Available resources / standards2) Checklists

Kew’s World Checklist of Selected Plant Families – covers 150 plant familieshttp://www.kew.org.uk/wcsp/ 45-50% complete

Example:

Page 15: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants
Page 16: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

4% 2%

94%

Names in both systems

Names in NCBI alone

Names in Kew alone

Comparison of names in NCBI and Kew systems (106 families)

Page 17: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Integrated Resources

1) Global Strategy for Plant Conservation (CBD)

TARGET 1: A list of all plants by 2010 – facilitated by Kew. 60% complete

Kew and Missouri work toward draft checklist + other data (www.iplants.org )

2) Catalogue of Life (Sp2000 + ITIS) (www.sp2000.org)

Serves existing checklists for all organisms (plants, animals, insects etc)

Much of Kew’s checklist data served. Offers alternative / conflicting views

3) Global Biodiversity Information Framework (www.gbif.org )

Serves specimen records from collections worldwide

Name catalogue served from “Catalogue of Life”

4) Encyclopedia of Life (www.eol.org)

Species pages – coordinating existing knowledge (video/ text/ images etc)

No additional name data. Use “Catalogue of Life” as backbone

Page 18: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Moving forward:improving Kew’s plant name services

1) Tailored consultancies – for target groupse.g. Medicinal Plants - WHO, EMEA, ICHreporting on existing lists of plant namesvalidating, cleaning & completing name listsbuilding and maintaining subsets for focus groups

2) Designing & developing web servicesautomated responses to queries from other system / APImaintenance of name lists avoiding costs for userssubscription services

3) Seeking to develop partnerships with user groupsinform design of services / user needsdevelop resource to meet specific demands

Page 19: Plant names: Obstacles and Solutions to access information about plants

Thanks for your attention!

Questions?

Ideas to pursue?

PS Biodiversity Information StandardsTaxonomic Databases Working Group TDWGhttp://www.tdgw.org/

Ontologies / Vocabularies / Schemas / LSIDs