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A “Botanist’s Botanist” : The Field Books of Timothy Plowman

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The Field Museum Library has recently digitized and added to the Biodiversity Heritage Library Timothy Plowman’s entire field book collection, which spans his career from 1969, when he worked for the botanical museum at Harvard, through his years as a curator of botany at the Field Museum from 1976-1987. Timothy Plowman was an ethnobotanist and the world authority on the taxon Erythroxylum (coca). This genus of tropical trees and shrubs is best known for the species Erythroxylumcoca L., a sacred leaf of the Andes, and also the source from which commercial cocaine is derived.

In his short lifetimePlowman died at the age of 45he collected materials in some of the most remote regions of the Andes and the rain forests of the Amazon, spending more than five years of his life in these harsh landscapes. As a result of Plowman’s work, the Field Museum is the most important repository in the world of research collections and literature pertaining to the classification of Erythroxylum. Plowman collected over 700 specimens of the genus from South America, and the Field Museum collection contains over 5,000 specimens collected worldwide as well as massive data resources. Plowman’s position as world authority on this genus also provided him a platform in which to speak on behalf of the indigenous peoples of the region and their traditional use of coca.

© The Field Museum, GN83861c.
Dr. Timothy Plowman, Botany, collecting coca plant specimens near Leticia, Peru.

While Plowman’s Ph.D. research at Harvard University mainly concentrated on Erythroxylum, he also had a special interest in Brunfelsia (nightshade family), and a fascinating chapter in Plowman’s research of Brunfelsia is highlighted in his collecting notebook from 1968-1969 in Venezuela and Colombia. After reaching Santa Rosa on the Río Guamués in Colombia, Plowman was introduced to an old shaman who produced the species Brunfelsia grandiflora, which had been discovered and described by Plowman’s mentor, Richard Evan Schultes. The plant was well known for its hallucinogenic properties, and is further described below.

Plowman, Timothy. Timothy Plowman Botanical Collecting Notebook: 1900-2286: 1968-1969.  Text and illustration by Timothy Plowman. Digitized by the Field Museum library.  http://s.si.edu/2eNl3aw

The shaman also brought from the forest a related plant that Plowman immediately identified as a new-to-science species, which he later named Brunfelsia chiricaspi, described on the following page. Wishing to confirm that this new plant also had similar properties as a drug, he asked the shaman to prepare it. At first the shaman refused his request, describing the plant as a “dangerous messenger of the forest,” but eventually relented. Plowman describes his experience from the drug, the effects of which he began to feel within ten minutes, within these pages of his field book.

Plowman, Timothy. Timothy Plowman Botanical Collecting Notebook:1900-2286: 1968-1969. Text by Timothy Plowman. Digitized by the Field Museum library. http://s.si.edu/2gJkF9P.
 

In the foreword to A revision of the South American species of Brunfelsia (Solanaceae), which was published posthumously as part of the Fieldiana Botany series, Plowman was described by colleagues as a man who “approached botanical research with the intensity and rigor of a scientist, the courage of his mentor, and the flair of a poet.” Making Plowman’s field books freely available online for the first time through the Biodiversity Heritage Library furthers the availability of the valuable scientific documentation about specimens, study sites, collecting details, and ecology, that were carried out by Timothy Plowman with such energy, enthusiasm, and grace.

Written by: 
Gretchen Rings, Reference & Interlibrary Loan Librarian 
Diana Duncan, Technical Services Librarian
The Field Museum of Natural History 

Sources:
http://emuweb.fieldmuseum.org/botany/plowman_bio.html

Plowman, Timothy, Sandra Knapp, and J. R. Press. 1998. A revision of the South American species of Brunfelsia (Solanaceae).[Chicago, Ill.]: Field Museum of Natural History.

The BHL Field Notes Project is funded by the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR).

Biodiversity Heritage Library Adds the National Agricultural Library as a New Member

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The Biodiversity Heritage Library is pleased to welcome the National Agricultural Library (NAL) as a new Member. Since joining the consortium as an Affiliate in 2014, NAL has contributed over 2 million pages to the BHL collection. NAL represents BHL’s 19th Member.

The National Agricultural Library (NAL) holds more than 8 million items, representing one of the largest collections of materials devoted to agriculture in the world. By statute, NAL is the primary depository of publications and information concerning the research and other activities of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).

“The National Agricultural Library collection is a true national treasure,” affirms BHL Program Director Martin R. Kalfatovic. “Through membership in BHL, NAL has demonstrated a strong commitment to providing free and open access to this significant collection. We look forward to continuing our collaborative efforts to build BHL’s online collection and share these valuable resources with the world.”

Childs' Fall Catalog. 1928. Digitized by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library from the Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection. http://s.si.edu/2xatpAG.

As a Member, the National Agricultural Library will strengthen BHL’s coverage of agricultural topics, providing increased access to historic USDA and other high demand, public domain items from its collection. In particular, the Library will continue to digitize material from its Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, which consists of over 200,000 American and foreign catalogs from the late 18th century to the present. To date, NAL has contributed over 33,000 catalogs from this collection to BHL. The catalogs can be viewed in BHL as part of the Seed & Nursery Catalogs collection.

“The National Agricultural Library is excited to become a Member of the Biodiversity Heritage Library and collaborate more closely with the other Member institutions,” says NAL Director Paul Wester. “NAL views BHL as a key avenue through which the library shares its wide-ranging collections of agricultural, natural and allied sciences with a national and international audience.”

The Biodiversity Heritage Library now consists of 19 Members and 18 Affiliates. Explore our consortium today.

Heterostyly Before Darwin: Tracing Early Observations of Primula Floral Morphs

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Primula vulgaris plants growing in woodland habitat. Photo by P.M. Gilmartin.

In 1860, Charles Darwin had an epiphany.

This was not an epiphany on the origin of species, as his monumental publication on the subject had been published one year earlier in 1859. This epiphany, which Darwin shared in a letter to his friend Joseph Dalton Hooker, was that flowers in the genus Primula display two distinct forms which differ in the length of the pistil's styles and the height of the stamen's anthers.

The condition of having multiple, distinct floral forms within a species is called heterostyly. Darwin coined the term distyly to describe the presence of two forms, or morphs. These morphs are called pin and thrum flowers, with pin flowers possessing long styles and low anthers and thrum flowers possessing short styles and high anthers. Each individual plant contains only flowers of the same morph, and the presence of heterostyly promotes insect-mediated out-crossing. In addition, a self incompatibility system is associated with heterostyly, which inhibits self-pollination. This ensures higher genetic diversity in future generations.

Darwin articulated his ideas on heterostyly within the paper 'On the two forms, or dimorphic condition, in species of Primula, and on their remarkable sexual relations,' which he read at the Linnean Society on 21 November 1861 and published a year later in the Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society, Botany.

Wood block print of Primula veris from Charles Darwin’s Different forms of Flower on Plants of the Same Species (1877) showing the detail of long styled (pin) and short styled (thrum) flowers. Digitized by University Library, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/32622458.

Darwin published further research on heterostyly fifteen years later within the monograph Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species (1877). Within this work, he cites earlier observations of the condition in Primula species. It was not until Darwin, however, that the reproductive significance of these morphs was understood.

Dr. Philip M. Gilmartin has been interested in Primula floral morphs for decades.

A Professor of Plant Molecular Genetics at the University of East Anglia, Gilmartin has been studying gene expression and plant development for thirty years. For the past twenty years, his lab has been focused on understanding the molecular basis of heterostyly in Primula.

Dr. Philip Gilmartin, Professor of Plant Molecular Genetics, University of East Anglia. Photo credit: UEA.

Gilmartin's interest in Primula heterostyly isn't restricted to genetics. While examining a print of Primula vulgaris from William Curtis'Flora Londinensis(1777-98), Gilmartin realized that the copper-plate engraving clearly depicted both pin and thrum flower morphs. This realization sparked an exploration into historical observations of heterostyly.

"I sought to track down original references to identify the earliest observations on heterostyly. The Biodiversity Heritage Library resources were invaluable in this study," affirms Gilmartin.

Copper plate engraving of Primula vulgaris from William Curtis’ Flora Londinensis (1791) showing pin and thrum flowers. Digitized by Smithsonian Libraries. http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/41070264.

To conduct his historical review, Gilmartin referred to the cited sources in Darwin's Different Forms of Flowers, as well as botanical images in early herbals, floral books, and florilegia. He accessed BHL several times each week while tracking down these references, using the scientific name finding tool and thumbnail view in the book reader to identify and navigate to relevant pages. He also downloaded whole PDFs and select pages of relevant material for future reference.

BHL also proved instrumental in helping Gilmartin resolve a perplexing citation error.

"For one reference cited in Darwin's Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species, the author (Kerner) and journal (Osterreichische Botanische Zeitshcrift) did not match the cited date (1835)," recalls Gilmartin. "I was eventually able to uncover the correct journal article from 1875 to find Darwin's intended reference. Online access to the scanned journals was invaluable."

Primula veris. Hand-colored copper-plate engraving by Pierre Turpin. Chaumeton, François-Pierre. Flore médicale. v. 5 (1818). Digitized by Biblioteca Digital del Real Jardin Botanico de Madrid. http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/76669.

As a result of this research, Gilmartin uncovered other 19th century illustrated representations of heterostyly in Flore Medicale (1818) and Hand-Atlas sämmtlicher medizinisch-pharmaceutischer Gewächse (1848), in addition to the 18th century Curtis image. Additionally, the earliest printed usage of the terms "pin-eyed" and "thrum-eyed" that Gilmartin was able to identify during his research appeared in Curtis' Flora Londinensis.

The earliest published description of heterostyly, however, occurred much earlier, within Carolus Clusius'Rariorum Aliquot Stirpium (1583). Gilmartin discovered this reference after consulting a 1943 French paper by van Dijk on historical observations of floral heteromorphy.

"Although Clusius was describing the two forms of flowers in different Primula varieties rather than within the same variety, this is the earliest description to my knowledge of the two forms of pin and thrum flowers which Darwin later studied," explains Gilmartin.

Primula veris. Clusius, Carolus. Rariorum Aliquot Stirpium. 1583. Digitized by the Missouri Botanical Garden. http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/6719232.

Gilmartin presented the results of his historical review within the article "On the Origins of Observations of Heterostyly in Primula", publishing in New Phytologist in 2015. Thanks to the Biodiversity Heritage Library, which is acknowledged in the paper, Gilmartin not only traced the published record of heterostyly but also gained historical context for his genetic research.

As for Darwin's epiphany, while he was not the first to observe heterostyly, he was the first to study and articulate the reproductive significance of Primula floral morphs. It was an achievement that Darwin took great personal pride in. As he revealed in his autobiography:

"No little discovery of mine ever gave me so much pleasure as making out the meaning of heterostyled flowers."

By Grace Costantino 
Outreach and Communication Manager 
Biodiversity Heritage Library 

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This post may contain the personal opinions of BHL users or affiliated staff and does not necessarily represent the official Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) position on these matters.

NDSR Residents Update

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BHL NDSR Mentors and Residents at the Missouri Botanic Garden [Photo by Martin Kalfatovic]
Hello again from the NDSR Residents! Since our last update in July we’ve been focusing on transforming our research into recommendation outlines that we presented to the BHL Tech Team last week. As we head into the final quarter of our residencies, we’ll be focusing on tweaking these ideas, developing workflows and proof of concepts, and finalizing our recommendations in a Best Practices White Paper by December. For this update, we wanted to give a preview of what some of these recommendations will look like and invite some preliminary feedback from the BHL Blog-o-sphere that we can consider as we move into these final months.


Katie has been evaluating current and investigating long term crowdsourcing projects to enhance BHL data and metadata. This has mostly focused on manuscript transcriptions and OCR corrections, but has broadened to include data extraction, named entity recognition, and optimizing, cleaning, and disambiguating collections data for use in large scale computational research.


Her recommendations include the following:
  1. Develop a sustainable, long term transcriptions and corrections crowdsourcing platform in which users identify items to correct or transcribe, tag text with scientific and common names, locations, events, dates/times, and other valuable observation data, and enjoy immediate access to updated text;
  2. Since crowdsourcing is likely not going to scale up to meet the transcription and corrections needs of 52+ million pages in BHL, staff and partner institutions should continue to investigate automated data recognition and extraction methods. Crowdsourced data will likely prove to be valuable training data for future algorithms;
  3. Add already transcribed content to the portal as plain, not marked up text;
  4. Disambiguate and add authority control to bibliographic metadata; and
  5. Donate data to Wikidata to expose collections to the semantic web. A linked data knowledge based, Wikidata will allow users to connect content in BHL to related collections and information across data repositories. Focus on bibliographic metadata to ultimately enrich structured citations across Wikimedia Foundation projects including Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons, WikiSpecies, and Wikisource; and BHL’s rich index of taxa that can improve the discovery of protologues and other heritage descriptions and treatments in BHL literature.


Alicia has been performing content analyses on the BHL corpus to determine how much of the world of biodiversity literature has been digitized by BHL thus far in order to focus future digitization efforts. These analyses have required her to dive into some data and text mining to create proof of concepts for analyzing the 50+ million pages of BHL.


Her recommendations include the following:
  1. Improving BHL data exports and documentation to encourage more users to manipulate BHL data and look at the “collection as data”;
  2. Adding BHL citations to Wikidata; and
  3. Exploring filtering scientific names into kingdoms for browsing BHL content and for targeting underrepresented taxa in BHL.


Ariadne has approached the goal of searching and browsing for illustrations in the BHL portal with a wide lens: Understanding its strategic context, conveying lessons about data production and engagement from BHL’s illustration crowdsourcing efforts, and investigating the role of illustrations in the scholarly research cycle and among the BHL portal’s taxonomic users. She is looking forward to trying her hand at the interface design process, developing proof of concepts, and continuing to work with collaborators and advisors towards well-rounded final recommendations.  

Her preliminary recommendations include:

  1. Build upon scientists’ and the public’s mutual love of illustrations to further the cause of biodiversity (ex. Inviting scientists to share information about their work, species, and history of the field using illustrations as a touchpoint);
  2. Fulfill the desire of crowdsourcing volunteers to make information accessible according to personal or group interests, within constraints of limited management (ex. Pursuing connections with the Wikipedia community); and
  3. Pursue computer vision as a method of data production.


Pam has been distributing and analyzing user surveys to inform the next version of BHL. Over the summer, a survey was posted on the BHL website to capture the feedback of individual users coming to BHL for their research needs. Currently, two surveys are in progress - one gathering the feedback of those users affiliated with the consortium of BHL libraries, and the other seeking the input of organizations and individuals who use BHL at the system level.

Results are still preliminary at this time for the first survey, but her initial recommendations include:
  1. Performing usability studies to help inform the design process after seeing navigation and user interface issues appear in the survey comments;
  2. Conducting focus groups to delve further into user needs and priorities for requirement gathering of particular features and enhancements; and
  3. Focusing on top needs identified by users in the survey: -improving search and browse; -providing a more streamlined download experience; and -enhancing named entities, including author name, scientific name, and geographic name.


Marissa has been researching best practices in digital libraries to make recommendations for Version 2 of the BHL portal. Through examining Europeana, the Digital Public Library of America, Trove, and other large-scale digital libraries as case studies, she is researching which tools, services, and standards are being used to present their collections.


Her preliminary recommendations include:

  1. Utilizing BHL’s current APIs to improve website functions. APIs from other libraries have been used to improve access to content in many ways, including letting users search collections by item type, by creating Twitter bots to broadcast thematic or random items, and offering a Google Chrome extension to showcase high-res images, to name a few;
  2. Exploring data visualizations through tools including Kumu and Tableau. Visualizing BHL’s data would not only add another discovery layer to BHL but would also help BHL staff and members track statistics as well. In the coming months, Marissa will be working with Tableau to create visualizations; and
  3. Create a beta site when BHL Version 2 is in development. To ease users into a completely revamped website, having a beta site active before making the full transition over will help users get accustomed to new features.

Association of Zoos and Aquariums Annual Conference 2017

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Last week the Association of Zoos and Aquariums held its annual conference in Indianapolis, Indiana. The conference draws around 2,800 attendees from a diverse group of institutions and organizations around the world.  The Expanding Access to Biodiversity Literature team was able to send representation and take part in the poster presentations. 

The Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) was originally founded in 1924 as the American Association of Zoological Parks and Aquariums, later changing its name to the American Association of Zoological Parks and Aquariums and eventually selecting its current moniker.  The founding officers included  Chairman C. Emerson Brown from the Philadelphia Zoological Park, Vice Chairman Dr. Harry M. Wegeforth of the San Diego Zoological Society, and Secretary Will O. Doolittle.  The original directors were Edward H. Bean of the Milwaukee Zoological Park and George P. Vierheller of the Saint Louis Zoological Garden.  Chairman C. Emerson Brown’s publication “A pocket list of the mammals of eastern Massachusetts…” can even be found in BHL here. 
As a non-profit the AZA is “dedicated to the advancement of zoos and aquariums in the areas of conservation, education, science, and recreation.”  The organization represents over 230 different institutions within the United States and around the world.  The AZA and their institutions have a strong commitment to animal welfare and conservation which is seen through the millions of dollars they commit to scientific research, conservation and educational programing.  

Besides supporting these areas they are also an independent accrediting organization.  With some of the highest and most comprehensive standards, not even 10% of the United States’ 2,800 licensed wildlife exhibitors meet the top standards held by AZA.  Every year AZA accredited institutions allocate $160 million on field conservation around the world- over 2,600 projects worked on by specialists in the field.  The AZA itself has provided a cumulative seven million dollars on over 375 projects in conservation.  Every year 40,000 teachers are trained at AZA accredited facilities, which lend support to state science curricula.  Overall, the Association of Zoos and Aquariums’ pledge to the natural world furthers the fields of animal welfare and conservation and trains new generations to save the biodiversity.
The conference began on Friday with committee meetings and the pre-conference tour.  On Saturday and Sunday, small session meetings and workshops were held.  Sunday evening an icebreaker was held at the Indiana State Museum ahead of the conference kickoff at the Opening General Session on Monday morning.  Below learn more about a sampling of the meetings, panels, and events that were attended by EABL.
Association of Zoos & Aquariums Signage
Coastal Ecosystem Learning Center (CELC) Meeting
The Coastal Ecosystem Learning Center, a network of 25 aquariums and marine science education centers located in the United States, Canada and Mexico, was originally foundedin 1996 by Coastal America.  With strong support from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the consortium works to involve the public in protecting coastal and marine ecosystems. One of the major topics at the meeting was aquaculture- cultivating aquatic animals or plants for food.  Not to be left behind the curve, BHL already holds a number of titleson the subject. Do you have any thoughts or feelings on aquaculture?  Let us know in the comment section!

California Association of Zoos and Aquariums
The California Association of Zoos and Aquariums (CAZA) is a way to bring together all of those involved in AZA accredited zoos and aquariums in the California area.  California currently maintains more accredited zoos than any other state- twenty-three.  CAZA is dedicated to monitoring the local legislation that would affect the welfare and conservation of the natural world. 

Icebreaker at the Indiana State Museum
Sunday evening the Indiana State Museum hosted a social event that allowed those in the zoo and aquarium field to catch up and enjoy Indiana history.  The museum, located along the Indiana Central Canal built in the 1800s, offered spectacular views of the city and even attracted the Indianapolis Colts’ mascot, Blue to join in the fun.

View from the Indiana State Museum of the Central Canal

Opening General Session
The conference kicked off Monday morning with the opening session.  Dennis Kelly, Chair of the AZA Board of Directors and the Director of the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute, welcomed attendees to the annual conference and introduced Mike Crowther, President and CEO of the Indianapolis Zoo who hosted this year’s conference.  He prepared attendees for the Indianapolis Zoo Day by throwing stuffed toy macaws into the audience to preface the zoo’s Magnificent Macaw exhibit which allows the birds to fly a half mile across the zoo and back  multiple times a day. 

The Opening General Session also included speeches by Dr. Carl Jones and Wayne Pacelle.  Dr. Carl Jones, winner of the 2016 Indianapolis Prize, is known around the world for his championing work in saving a number of different species that were on the brink of extinction: the pink pigeon, the echo parakeet and the Mauritius kestrel.  Dr. Jones noted that zoos have the answer to saving species and urged attendees to think of zoos as arks and be creative in animal management.  He recalled many instances where other scientists recommended saving species that were not high risk, but maintained his commitment to high-risk species.  His commitment paid off when he restored a species (the Mauritius kestrel) of four to four hundred over the course of a decade.  Dr. Jones noted “it is not hard to save a species, but it takes time” and “we should not tolerate any future extinctions.”  Through his experiences as a world-class conservationist, he challenged the idea that focusing on entire ecosystems was the only way to save a species.  Instead, he found that working with particular species saves entire systems and that it is not about preservation, but looking forward and thinking about the future.

Wayne Pacelle is the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS.)  In the position since 2004, Pacelle has helped the HSUS grow and pursue its goal of being the largest animal care and advocacy organization in the nation.  Since the start of his tenure, Pacelle has overseen the passing of over 1,100 state animal protection laws and over 100 federal statutes.  Before Pacelle took the stage, attendees were urged to remember that diversity made us stronger and that this was even true of diverse and differing opinions.  Pacelle lauded the work AZA zoos have been doing in the areas of animal welfare and conservation and highlighted the work the HSUS is doing in animal protection.      

Nature of Americans
“The Future of Wildlife Depends on the Connections we Make Today and the ‘Nature of Americans’” was one of the first panels. The speakers- Claire Martin from the Disney Conservation Fund, Dr. Daniel Escher of DJ Case & Associates, and Monica Lopez Magee of the Children and Nature Network - presented a study done between 2015 and 2016 in response to the growing amount of time spent inside and on electronic media.  The major mission of the talks was to discuss what people think about nature and how do those in the field turn that into action.

Dr. Escher, a social scientist, talked about the Nature of Americans study (available at https://natureofamericans.org.)   Some of the key findings were that people like zoos and aquariums, the vast majority of children and adults like visiting zoos and aquariums, interest in nature is high across household incomes, and interest in nature is high and stable across educational levels.  Another major takeaway was that nature is social.  Most of the interviewed returned responses that showed people were more likely to experience nature in social groups rather than alone.

Magee went over some of the examples of using the data found in the study to connect with the community.  The first was “Nature in the City.” The Tracy Aviary in Utah brought nature to the community.  They attempted to go mobile and do activities outside of their institution. However, the initial attempt was not enough.  They eventually found that collaborating with local libraries and using them as a community hub and audience was very successful.  

Another example presented was at the Houston Zoo.  They had a Zoo Sprouts program that had always been indoors. In order to get more engagement with the users they just moved the program outdoors. They found that this caused the children to be more inclined to meet and touch the animals and to explore their surroundings. The idea that nature is messy and unexpected things happen within it versus technology, which can be more stagnant, were shown by both the study and the case studies to be the reason children were drawn to it.

Overall, this panel focused on explaining the study and examples of using nature in education and outreach in order to give those in the zoo and aquarium field ideas of how to use these findings in their own institutions whether in activities or even in branding.

Why Save a Species?
The “Why Save a Species” panel brought together five different international conservation projects that highlighted regional species and animal reintroductions. The presentations focused on lessons on wildlife management, human-animal interactions and public interaction, working with international colleagues and working with stakeholders to aid in saving species from extinction.

Dr. Melissa Songer gave the first presentation from the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute and National Zoo. It centered on restoring the Przewalksi’s horse to the wild in the Kalameili Nature Reserve located in Xinjiang, China. The Przewalksi’s horse was extinct in the wild in the 1960s with the only living animals being in Western zoos.  Within these zoos, and with careful genetic management, the population grew from 14 founders into 1,900 horses who lived in captivity.  Reintroduction efforts began, and they are no longer nearing extinction. 

This particular presentation was on the reintroduction efforts in Mongolia. Because of the harsh winters, they turned the project into a semi-release of the horses. The project members reached out to the locals to see if they were interested in the project and found that the locals were worried about how the release program would affect local pastures for the cattle and therefore affect the locals' livelihood. Dr. Songer noted that one of the challenges was balancing the goals of the different stakeholders.

Carlos Galvis of the Zoologico de Cali in Columbia presented on the Golden Poison Frog. The Wildlife Conservation Society and the Zurich Zoo provided funding to help conserve the species in Colombia.  Through this research, they found that the range of distribution of the frogs was much larger than originally thought.  They are now working to use this new distribution of the species to conduct field studies and help determine if reintroduction is necessary.

Dr. Ian Singleton, Director of Conservation of the PanEco Foundation and Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Program talked about their work in reintroducing the orangutans to their native Indonesia. Through Dr. Singleton’s work, two genetically viable and self-sustaining wild populations have been established. Their goal is to release 350 orangutans at each of their sites.  So far 170 orangutans have been released in Jambi and 99 have been released in Jantho. They have been attempting to tackle the demand for wildlife in the illegal trade through education of the locals, finding that some of those involved just needed to be told that it was detrimental to the population of the orangutans. 

Dr. Amy Dickman, director of the Ruaha Carnivore Project in Tanzania, highlighted the struggle between humans and carnivores in the area.  The Barabaig people have long had a tradition of killing African lions. Dr. Dickman’s team wanted to determine why they were killing the lions and other large carnivores which would contribute to eventual extinction of species. After many failed attempts at making contact with the tribe, they found that the people had started using the solar charging station to charge their mobile phones. Eventually they were able to create an understanding and trust with the community. 

She found that there were four major reasons why the carnivores were being hunted: deprecation of cattle, absence of benefit from their presence, rewards to warriors for the killing of the animals, and lack of motivation to care about the animals. To solve the first issue, they helped to build safe areas for their cattle and crops. They then started a point system that rewarded the community members for capturing images of the local wildlife.  The points could be exchanged for something they wanted- healthcare and other benefits. They also started a warrior school in order to allow people in the community to still gain notoriety.  The school provided these ‘warriors’ with educational benefits. Thanks to Dr. Dickman and her team they were able to change an entire community’s understanding of nature.

John Newby, CEO of the Sahara Conservation Fund, talked about another species who has been extinct in the wild since the 1980s- the scimitar-horned oryx. The last surviving oryx was killed inside a game reserve in Chad.  In 2008 the Sahara Conservation Fund started its project to reintroduce oryx into their natural habitat. The first fully wild calves have already been born- there are currently 90 in the wild breeding and 23 offspring.  The Fund’s goal is to have 500 breeding animals that are secure and free-ranging. Newby stressed that the zoo community played a major role in helping stop the extinction of the oryx and that the captive population was imperative for reintroducing the species.

Michael Mace, curator of birds at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, closed out the panel.  He noted zoos and aquariums need to continue to fight for every creature.  This includes the flagship or more well-known animals as well as the lesser known species and even the unknown species that have yet to be discovered.  It is also imperative to ignite visitors- engaging and inspiring the next generation to protect wildlife. Some of the overall takeaways were that while donors may want to give a large amount of money in a short time, budgets for conservation efforts need to be able to adapt and change without being specifically allocated. Each of the presentations mentioned the local communities, and it is important to note that they cannot sustain these conservation efforts.  Therefore, it is imperative that international supporters step up.  Since these conservation efforts take time, donor fatigue happens and those involved should be prepared to get creative with providing results and finding new sponsors.
Expanding Access to Biodiversity Literature Poster
Poster Reception
The Expanding Access to Biodiversity Literature poster was titled “ZooLiterature Online” and reflected the work the grant had done in the area of zoo and aquarium literature.  Since AZA was a relatively new area for BHL, a portion of the poster was general information about BHL highlighting some of the different ways content could be used and analyzed. The poster also highlighted the Expanding Access project, its goals, grant team institutions, accomplishments and zoo and aquariums contributors and titles in BHL, many added as part of EABL. The poster was well received and introduced many AZA conference attendees to BHL.

Explore the zoological titles highlighted in the EABL poster in BHL here:


Communities Come Together Over Gardens: Using Horticulture to Connect with Our Neighbors
The focus of most of the AZA panels was, logically, zoos and aquariums.  However, one of the final panel options centered around botanical gardens in zoos. The panel began with a look back at horticulture in zoos. Fifty years ago, it involved trimming hedges around the property. Forty years ago, zoos moved towards hiring horticulturists to create convincing habitats. Moving to thirty years ago, some zoos started becoming botanical gardens as well. It was just twenty years ago that zoos and aquariums became more interested in plant conservation as an added component to their missions. 

Presenting at the panel was Steve Foltz, Director of Horticulture at the Cincinatti Zoo and Botanical Garden; Paul Bouseman, Botanical Curator at the Mesker Park Zoo and Botanic Garden; Bob Chabot, former Director of Horticulture at the Jacksonville Zoo and Gardens and current Chief of Staff at Zoo New England; and Christine Nye, Horticultural Programs Manager at the John G. Shedd Aquarium. 

Each presenter highlighted the work their zoos and aquariums did both within their institution and in their community in the area of horticulture. The Cincinnati Zoo worked to build bridges in their community by planting trees in areas of the town that were affected by tornadoes or in communities in need of transformation. They worked with master gardeners, Proctor and Gamble, and the Cincinnati Reds to help renew the community and change the way the community looks at the zoo. 

The Shedd Aquarium uses the spaces around its exhibit as a free public garden space and created volunteer and education programs around it. 

The Mesker Park Zoo and Botanic Garden uses horticulture to attract people with the power of plants. Mesker’s local community comes in and volunteers and they gain a better connection with the zoo. 

The Jacksonville Zoo and Garden partnered with a number of different local organizations and even a high school. Chabot and the zoo worked to create gardens in a number of locations and used the local arts high school- Douglas Anderson School of the Arts- to record sounds for the Butterfly Hollow exhibit.
Indianapolis Zoo Garden

Zoo Day at the Indianapolis Zoo
The final event of the AZA Annual Conference was Zoo Day.  The day included full access to the rides and attractions- including the carousel, train ride, skyline, 4D theatre, Kombo Family Coaster, and Race-A-Cheetah. They also set up a number of different chats, demos, feedings and presentations throughout the afternoon and evening.  Between the hosted lunch, happy hour, dinner, and dancing AZA attendees were able to take advantage of a number of different Behind-the-Scenes Open-Houses that allowed those from other zoos and aquariums to get a better understanding of the operations and animal care at the Indianapolis Zoo. 

Also attended were Public Perceptions of Zoos and Aquariums in a Changing World, Classic Continuing Conservation, What’s New in Exhibit Design?, and Cognitive Tasks for Great Apes: Promoting Conservation, Research, Education and Animal Wellness.

Moving forward, the Expanding Access team and the Biodiversity Heritage Library hope to maintain our current relationships with Zoo and Aquarium institutions and publishers.

Are you part of a zoo or aquarium and interested in what you can do to get involved? Here’s some tips on what you can do!
1.       Use BHL!
2.       Consider adding your publications to BHL. 
3.       If you have legacy literature you want scanned from your library or archive, email us!
4.       Suggest titles you would like to see in BHL and we will do our best to include them.
For any of these suggestions please email us at enablingaccess.bhl@gmail.com or use our Feedback form here.  You can also check out our poster presentation in PDF format here.

Post by Mariah Lewis
Metadata Specialist
The New York Botanical Garden
Expanding Access to Biodiversity Literature Project

Australia's First Flora

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Smith, James Edward. A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland. 1793-95. Engraving by James Sowerby. Digitized by Harvard University Botany Libraries. http://s.si.edu/2wUwwYX.

As far back as antiquity, Western scholars theorized the existence of a great southern continent that they called Terra Australis. While the continent found its way onto many early European maps, the depictions were theoretical and generally included a single landmass encompassing the South Pole and spreading far north to include Australia, New Zealand and, at its most extreme, even Tierra del Fuego.

With expeditions in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the mystery in Europe surrounding this great southern continent slowly gave way to scientific exploration of the landmasses discovered, including New Holland, or Australia.

The published scientific record of Australian flora has its roots in the British Admiralty-commissioned voyage of William Dampier, which reached Australia in 1699. During the expedition, Dampier collected plant specimens, and his A Voyage to New Holland, published in 1703, is the first book known to include published drawings of Australian flora (Hewson 1999, 16-17). It has been digitized in BHL by the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria.

Dampier, William. A Voyage to New Holland. 1703. Digitized by Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria. http://s.si.edu/2xvgOHP.

Seventy years after Dampier’s voyage, the 1768-1771 voyage of James Cook to the South Seas sparked a renewed interest in the study and cultivation of Australia’s botany. The expedition’s natural historians and artists collected, described and illustrated many botanical specimens during the voyage, which were brought back to England for further study (ibid., 22-26).

Further expeditions established additional Australian plant collections, which were accessible to European botanists. For example, at the end of the eighteenth century, England sent the First Fleet, under the command of Captain Arthur Phillip, to establish a penal colony on the continent. The colony eventually sent plants and animals from Australia back to England (ibid., 33-34).

John White, the First Fleet surgeon and an amateur naturalist, made many of these early collections. He had some of his specimens described and illustrated. Eight botanical species, along with numerous animal species, were published with accompanying illustrations in his Journal of a Voyage to New South Wales (1790). It has been digitized in BHL by Harvard University Botany Libraries.

White, John. Journal of a Voyage to New South Wales. 1790. Digitized by Harvard University Botany Libraries. http://s.si.edu/2fp1xhg.

White sent his plant collections and drawings to Thomas Wilson, a Fellow of the Linnean Society, who then gave them to James Edward Smith for study (ibid., 34). This collaboration eventually contributed to the first published scientific book dedicated to Australian flora: A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland.

Smith, James Edward. A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland. 1793-95. Engraving by James Sowerby. Digitized by Harvard University Botany Libraries. http://s.si.edu/2xJdwAB.

Issued in four parts between 1793-1795, A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland was initially published as part of Zoology and Botany of New Holland. Following the production of the first two botany parts, Zoology and Botany was split into two separate publications. James Edward Smith (1759-1828), a prominent botanist and co-founder of the Linnean Society of London (The Linnean Society of London 2017), wrote the plant descriptions for the botany parts while James Sowerby, a prolific natural historian, artist and engraver who produced thousands of illustrations over his career, prepared the engravings. Sowerby also engraved the plates for the aforementioned zoology volume, which was authored by George Shaw.

Smith, James Edward. A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland. 1793-95. Engraving by James Sowerby. Digitized by Harvard University Botany Libraries. http://s.si.edu/2fpDRti.

Sowerby prepared the sixteen engravings in A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland based on plant specimens and drawings that Thomas Wilson had received from John White. Several of these drawings were the work of Thomas Watling, a professional artist convicted of forgery. Transported to the penal colony in Australia in 1792, Watling worked under John White to paint the continent’s natural history. He is the only known convict artist whose work was used as the basis for a botanical scientific publication (Hewson 1999, 36-37).

Smith, James Edward. A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland. 1793-95. Engraving by James Sowerby. Digitized by Harvard University Botany Libraries. http://s.si.edu/2wj30wm.

A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland has been digitized in BHL by Harvard University Botany Libraries.

The illustrations from the work have also been uploaded to BHL’s Flickr. This not only allows for easy exploration of this important botanical art, but the images have also been taxon tagged with the scientific name of the species depicted, making it easy to identify the plant illustrated in each image. Explore the tags section of each image in Flickr to see the scientific names. 

We encourage volunteers to help taxon tag BHL images in Flickr as part of our citizen science program. Learn more about how you can get involved

A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland introduced many Europeans to Australian flora. The illustrations were an especially important contribution to the scientific record of Australian plants. Sowerby’s work is a broader reflection of the importance of scientific illustration, which has been used for centuries to aid in the accurate identification of species and has supported the progression of the biological sciences at large. These illustrations were propagated through the publication of natural history books, allowing wider access to knowledge about biodiversity across the globe.  

By Grace Costantino
Outreach and Communication Manager
Biodiversity Heritage Library

References 

BHL Welcomes Oak Spring Garden Foundation as a New Affiliate

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This quarter, the Biodiversity Heritage Library welcomed the Oak Spring Garden Foundation (OSGF) as a new Affiliate. The BHL consortium now consists of 19 Members and 18 Affiliates.

With a mission to perpetuate and share the gifts of Rachel (“Bunny”) Lambert Mellon, OSGF is dedicated to inspiring and facilitating scholarship and public dialogue on the history and future of plants. The Foundation operates from Bunny Mellon’s 263-acre estate in Upperville, VA, which includes her residence, garden, and Library.

The Oak Spring Garden Library is home to Bunny Mellon’s personal collection of rare books, manuscripts, and artworks, which she acquired to support her research and design work. Consisting of approximately 19,000 objects, the collection’s strengths include garden and garden design, horticulture, botanical studies, natural history, voyages, architecture, and decorative arts.

Duhamel du Monceau, M. Traité des arbres fruitiers. v. 1 (1768). Contributed by the Oak Spring Garden Library. http://s.si.edu/2fFO3O5.

As an Affiliate, OSGF will enhance BHL’s collection by contributing rare and unique material from the Library. Providing open access to this significant collection will allow the Foundation to share Bunny Mellon’s legacy with a global community and impact research around the world.

Visit BHL to explore Traité des arbres fruitiers, the first title contributed by the Oak Spring Garden Library to BHL. This title was hand-picked by Bunny Mellon for contribution to the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Learn more.

BHL Moves to HTTPS

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HTTPS? What does it mean? HTTP is the language that your browser uses to communicate to BHL and the S stands for Secure, encrypted, unreadable, or at least much, much harder to read.

The web is moving to encrypted connections across the board. In 2014 Google announced that their page rank algorithm that decides the order of your google.com search results will now rank insecure pages slightly lower than secure pages. From security to rankings, encrypted connections are better for everyone.

(Source: Sean MacEntee via Wikimedia Commons (CC-BY 2.0))


"What does it mean for how I use BHL?" you ask.

Well, not much. If you go to a link that uses http://, you will invisibly be redirected to https:// almost immediately.

"What does it mean for my bookmarks or catalog?"

Those still work, too. If you wish, you may update your bookmarks to use https:// and if it's simple, your catalog and databases, as well. However, the old http:// will continue to redirect indefinitely and forever.

"Why would I want to encrypt my work on BHL? We're not doing top secret work here."

Encryption of the communication between your computer and BHL prevents malicious activity, such as intercepting the content, inserting some nasty code onto the page, and happily sending it along to your browser to wreak havoc on your day.

"How do I know it's really working?" 

You've seen it already: a green padlock icon, sometimes with the text "Secure" beside it. This indicates that the site and all of its content are fully encrypted and hidden from prying eyes and hackers.

"What if I use the BHL API? Do I need to do anything?"

After a minor hiccup this morning, no, there's nothing you need to do. Going forward, however, the best action to take is to update your code to use https://.

"Psst! This very blog post isn't encrypted. Did you forget it?"

Good eye for detail! We are in the process of updating the blog, and website encryption will be part of the relaunch later in 2017.

"And what about all those wiki pages that still refer to http://?"

We'll be updating those as we can. Thanks for your patience, but the links all still work!

In summary, carry on as you would and continue the great work you do. If you have specific questions, please feel free to send us feedback here.


Charles Schuchert: “[He] mapped the ancient seas and fathomed the geologic past”

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The Yale Peabody Museum of History has partnered with the Biodiversity Heritage Library Field Notes Project to digitize a selection of primary natural history field research. Over the last year, the Peabody Museum has made 69 of invertebrate paleontologist Charles Schuchert’s field notebooks available to the public through Internet Archive and BHL.

Schuchert (3 July 1858 – 20 November 1942) was known for his seminal works on brachiopods, his unprecedentedly detailed and accurate paleogeographic maps of North America, devotedly supporting students academically and financially, and an unwavering dedication to his studies that resulted in over 236 published works, 130 paleogeographic maps, and more than 89,000 invertebrate paleontology specimens in the Yale Peabody Museum alone.

Lore has it that his affinity for invertebrate paleontology was cemented when a worker digging a ditch near his home in Cincinnati casually tossed 8 year old Schuchert a fossil [1]. Collecting such fossils from the local hills led to what would eventually evolve into the 2nd largest brachiopod collection in the nation [2]. Even in those early years, Schuchert’s scientific rigor was evident as he carefully labeled each specimen under his care (even if his first specimen determination of “petrifaction of a nanny-goat’s horn” did turn out to be a coral) [3]. At some point (sources variously say he was 11 or 17), he purchased The Paleontology of Ohio from a local drugstore and began his study in earnest.

Despite the auspicious early years of this lifelong love affair, Schuchert’s paleontological career began late, and was not without obstacles. During his childhood, Charles’ mother Agatha worked in a sewing factory, and his father Philip managed to start a modest business making parlor tables. Charles juggled chores and homework with opening their shop at 7am and continuing work there after school. Upon completing the 6th grade, Charles left school and devoted his days to working in the furniture factory’s varnish room.

 In 1877, when Charles was 19, a fire broke out in the furniture factory and burned it to the ground. After emigrating from Germany and struggling to make ends meet for his small family, the devastation wrought by the fire overwhelmed Philip, and he sickened and died. But Charles, in one of the many instances in which he persevered against great odds, scraped together some $900, rebuilt the furniture business, and over the next few years expanded to become successful.
Schuchert, C. Field Notebook: Alabama. (1894). www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/52997782

In the same year as the fire, Charles befriended Edward Oscar Ulrich, another young man with a love of fossils. Ulrich had some university schooling and was appointed to manage the Cincinnati Society of Natural History collections. Shortly thereafter, Charles visited St. Louis to sell furniture and looked up an expert on crinoids, Dr. G. Hambach. From Hambach, Charles learned lithography, a skill which allowed him to assist Ulrich in publishing material on local brachiopods and bryozoans over the next several years.

In 1884, there was another fire and once again the Schuchert furniture factory burned down. For the next 4 years Charles worked as a laborer in other furniture businesses until the renowned state geologist/paleontologist of New York, James Hall, came to visit Cincinnati. On seeing Schuchert’s collection and expertise, he hired Charles as his assistant.

In Albany, Charles made a number of connections that would serve him well, including one with Charles Emerson Beecher, then faculty at Yale and staff at the Yale Peabody Museum. After some time spent studying Minnesotan brachiopods in Minneapolis, Schuchert joined the staff of the U.S. Geological Survey in Washington in 1893. That April he was sent to the Yale Peabody Museum to assist Beecher in preparing early carboniferous crinoids for display at the Chicago Exposition. Shortly after Schuchert’s return to Washington, he became assistant curator of invertebrate paleontology at the U.S. National Museum.

Hand-drawn map to which Schuchert added notes over many years. This map was eventually published in the second edition of Outlines of Historical Geology (plate 28, map 1, page 230).

Upon Beecher’s sudden death in the winter of 1903, Schuchert was hired at Yale as professor of paleontology, curator of collections at Peabody Museum, and a director of the Sheffield Scientific School. At 46 years old with a 6th grade education, he set foot in a college classroom for the first time and taught his first college courses. This unorthodox appointment resulted in uniquely valuable solutions to common problems: when faced with bored students struggling to imagine geographical relationships between places they had never seen, Charles developed extremely detailed paleographic maps.

Although researchers had been drawing paleogeographic maps since James E. Dana popularized them several decades prior [1], Schuchert revolutionized the practice by showing smaller time periods in his maps (on the order of only several million years, as opposed to entire geologic eras, which span several hundred million years). This smaller slice of time allowed Schuchert to represent a geographic area with exponentially greater precision. He argued repeatedly over the course of his career in papers, books, and lectures that mapping too broad a temporal span meant including so many geologic changes that the resulting model did not accurately portray any moment in history at all.

An astute observation about the need for more detailed paleogeographic maps and their utility as stratigraphic teaching tools turned into a lifelong project as Charles undertook trip after trip gathering data, and spent long evenings painstakingly adding details to the array of maps on the custom desk he had built for the task [4].

Schuchert, C. Field Notebook: Michigan, New York, Ohio, Ontario. (1895). https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/53191047 

Schuchert eventually produced maps of North America spanning all of geologic time. In 1910, he published Paleogeography of North America, which would become the standard text on the subject, and is still in use today [5]. The countless carefully recorded observations that made these feats possible are retained in his field notebooks: a historical record of a historical record.

The Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History is honored to have the opportunity to share these notebooks with you. We hope that they continue to inspire the dreams of budding researchers, and that through them Charles Schuchert’s unflagging devotion to his passion can continue to support the efforts of the scientists to come after him as he did during his years as teacher, mentor, and first and foremost: paleontologist.

View Charles Schuchert's field notes in BHL here.

Written by: 
Nicole Palffy-Muhoray, Museum Assistant
Yale Peabody Museum of History


[1] Knopf, Adolph. "Biographical memoir of Charles Schuchert, 1858-1942." National Acad. Sei., Biogr. Mem 27 (1952): 363-389. 
[2] http://peabody.yale.edu/collections/invertebrate-paleontology/schuchert-brachiopod-collection 
[3] Kaesler, Roger L. "Carl O. Dunbar on Charles Schuchert." (1987): 406-410. 
[4] Schuchert, Charles. Atlas of paleogeographic maps of North America. Wiley, 1955. 
[5] Schuchert, Charles. "Paleogeography of North America." Geological Society of America Bulletin 20.1 (1910): 427-606.
Title quote from: Scientific Notes and News. (1935). Science, 81(2113), 633

The BHL Field Notes Project is funded by the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR).

Re-Examining the Jurassic Mammal Fossils of the UK

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Elsa Panciroli, Palaeontology PhD candidate, at work on the Isle of Skye. Photo credit: Elsa Panciroli.

Mesozoic mammal palaeontology is in the middle of a revolution. Since the first mammals and their closest mammal-like relatives were discovered in the early 1800s, most of the fossil record for these earliest ancestors of ours were fragments of jaw and isolated teeth, the size of rice grains. In the last fifteen years however, an increasing number of more complete skeletons have been found in China, radically changing our understanding of the first mammals. It turns out they were more diverse and ecologically specialised than anyone previously suspected.

Now we have new skeletons, it is more important than ever to pull together and sort through the historical fossil finds and descriptions. This means tracking down old and often obscure scientific papers. That’s how I discovered BHL.

My name is Elsa, and I’m in the third year of my PhD on the origin and evolution of mammals, at the University of Edinburgh and National Museums Scotland. My work centres on the spectacular fossils found on the Isle of Skye; a beautiful island in Scotland’s Inner Hebrides. The Middle Jurassic limestones of Skye are yielding the best Mesozoic aged mammal fossils found in the UK, and arguably among the best in the world.

The mammal fossils of Skye come from similar aged rocks to the very first Mesozoic mammal fossils ever described. In 1824, The Reverend William Buckland not only introduced the Victorian world to the meat-eating dinosaur Megalosaurus, but also a sturdy little mammal jaw, complete with little pointed teeth. This came to be called Phascolotherium. These fossils were recovered from the Stonesfield Slate of Oxfordshire. The rocks are Bathonian in age, a Jurassic time period spanning 168-166 million years ago.

Upper jaw and teeth of Megalosaurus. Buckland, William. Notice on the Megalosaurus or great Fossil Lizard of Stonesfield. Transactions of the Geological Society ser. 2, v. 1: 390-396. Digitized by California Academy of Sciences. http://s.si.edu/2y9Eb7M.

Since Buckland’s initial description, the Bathonian rocks of the UK have been the most productive Mesozoic mammal strata. Many new species and genera have been identified from sites such as Kirtlington in Oxfordshire, and Watton Cliff in Dorset. In order to understand the relationships between the mammals we are now finding on Skye, and previous fossil finds, I’ve had to scour old journal articles and papers.

Thanks to the BHL, I’ve been able to read the original descriptions by William Buckland and Richard Owen, and those by the many great palaeontologists who followed them. To begin with, I had relied on sending hopeful emails to established colleagues to try and beg obscure old scientific papers from them. I came across BHL a few months into the first year of my PhD, via desperate searching for old articles online. To my delight, many of the old journals I needed were on their website. Once I found what I wanted, it was easy to select the relevant pages and generate a PDF, which BHL emailed to me within minutes. This service has to be one of the best things BHL offers.

From Richard Owen’s On the Jaws of Thylacotherium prevostii (Valenciennes) from Stonesfield (1838), to Clemens and Mills Review of Peramus tenuirostrus Owen (Eupantotheria, Mammalia) (1971), I’ve been able to track down papers unavailable elsewhere. These may be old, but without them I wouldn’t be able to appreciate the full scientific history of the specimens we are working on today, nor check on the references of previous authors who cited them.

Panciroli prospecting for Jurassic fossils in Northern Skye. Photo credit: Elsa Panciroli/Davide Foffa.

Some of the papers BHL have been able to provide have had even more direct bearing on my own publications. They’ve also proven a test of BHL’s staff helpfulness – a test they passed with flying colours.

Many of the animals I study were not yet true-mammals; lacking the distinguishing skeletal characteristics that define this group, such as a dentary-squamosal jaw joint. They are instead, the closest relatives, referred to as mammaliaforms and mammaliamorphs. One such group are the Tritylodontidae. These animals would have looked a lot like mammals at first glance, but they are only a close-sister group. They split off from the mammals and charted their own course through evolutionary history, developing grinding teeth for eating vegetation, and growing much larger than their contemporaneous mammal cousins.

The first tritylodontid described was from the Jurassic of England, a creature called Stereognathus ooliticus. In 1857, Sir Richard Owen figured it in one of his papers, from the type specimen which comprises three molar teeth in a piece of upper jaw. My colleagues and I were looking at the related Stereognathus species, S.hebridicus from Skye. Our goal was to determine if the Scottish species was truly different, or whether all of these fossils were actually from the same original English species. To make this comparison we not only had to look at the original fossil, but track down a high quality copy of Richard Owen’s figure from 1857. Online we found plenty of copies of it, but none in the high resolution necessary.

Stereognathus ooliticus. Owen, Richard. 1857. On the affinity of Stereognathus ooliticus (Charlesworth) a mammal from the Oolitic slate of Stonesfield. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 13:1–11. Digitized by Smithsonian Libraries. http://s.si.edu/2yeJQel.

I contacted the BHL by email. They had the journal containing Owen’s description. I visited one of their Member libraries at the Natural History Museum in London, where a helpful staff member found the journal and showed me how to use the scanner. When this proved not to yield a high-enough resolution image for my purposes, she took me behind the scenes and we scanned the figures on another, more powerful scanner in the back-office. I was so grateful!

Thanks to the images I got that day, my co-authors and I were able to finish our publication: A reassessment of the postcanine dentition and systematics of the tritylodontid Stereognathus (Cynodontia, Tritylodontidae, Mammaliamorpha), from the Middle Jurassic of the United Kingdom (See Figure 3). We saw how the fossil drawn by Owen had been worn and damaged over the years by comparing this image to the existing specimen. The damage has an impact on how we carry out taxonomic comparisons between new material found, and the old type specimens. This knowledge wouldn’t have been available without BHL’s resources and assistance.

I now use BHL at least every month or two. Instead of a last resort, I consider it one of my first stops in any search for historical publications. In an age when researchers increasingly expect to be able to access resources online, it provides an amazing resource. The fact that this resource is open access is just amazing. It is only right that everyone should be able to appreciate our shared biodiversity heritage: BHL is helping make that a reality.

By Elsa Panciroli (@gsciencelady)
PhD Candidate - Origin and Early Evolution of Mammals 
University of Edinburgh / National Museum of Scotland

______________________________________ 

This post may contain the personal opinions of BHL users or affiliated staff and does not necessarily represent the official Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) position on these matters.

Lloyd Library and Museum

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"Paraphernalia," photo by Cindi (Flickr, Creative Commons)

Over the course of the Expanding Access to Biodiversity Literature (EABL) project, contributing organizations have shipped material to Internet Archive scanning centers around the country. A few have scanned their own material, and a few more have used third-party commercial services. One EABL contributor did things a little differently.

Betsy Kruthoffer, Librarian and Rare Books Cataloger at the Lloyd Library and Museum, selected a number of important titles from the library's collection that were not in BHL. After weighing various scanning options, she got in touch with the digital lab at the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County (PLCH), which had done good work for a Lloyd patron the previous year (and, conveniently, is located right down the street). PLCH agreed to do the scanning, with the understanding that the digitized books would also be made available in a PLCH online collection.

Once the scanning was complete, Betsy considered loading all of the images onto an external hard drive and mailing it to Mariah Lewis, the EABL Metadata Specialist, in order to contribute the scans to BHL. After learning about Macaw (BHL's metadata and upload software), however, she decided to take a stab at the uploading herself--with great success. BHL's collection is richer thanks to her thorough work.

History of the Lloyd Library and Museum


The Lloyd Library began with three brothers: John Uri, Nelson Ashley, and Curtis Gates Lloyd. According to tradition, the first books in the library were Edward Parrish's A Treatise on Pharmacy (1864 edition) and George Fownes'A Manual of Elementary Chemistry, Theoretical and Practical (1864 edition). These books accompanied John Uri Lloyd, the oldest of the three, when he went to Cincinnati to become a pharmacist in 1864. His brothers soon followed after. 

Eventually, the brothers joined together to form Lloyd Brothers, Pharmacists, Inc. John Uri's small library grew with the company; in 1901, it got its own building (it would move several times in following years), and in 1919, a trust was established to ensure that the library would continue and be open to the public. A new structure was erected in 1970 adjacent to the one that had housed the library for 75 years. This is where the library remains today.

The Lloyd brothers. http://www.lloydlibrary.org/history/lloyd%20pharmacy.html.

The Lloyd Library has one of the preeminent North American collections related to pharmacology and natural products, but it covers many related subjects as well: botany, pharmacognosy, herbal and alternative medicine, horticulture, eclectic medicine (an herbal medicine school), and sectarian medicine (predecessor to homeopathy), among others. 

Curtis Gates Lloyd, an avid mycologist, amassed a considerable herbarium, nicknamed the "mushroom museum." After his death in 1926, the botanical specimens were given to the University of Cincinnati, and the mushrooms went to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. A small collection of medicine bottles and pharmacy implements remains; these comprise the Lloyd Museum, which features permanent and rotating exhibits

For more detailed accounts of the Lloyd brothers, their company, and the history of the Lloyd Library and Museum, visit the Lloyd's website

Rare Books from the Lloyd Library


Of the titles digitized by PLCH, Betsy Kruthoffer considers one the most important: John Sibthorp's Flora Graeca, published in 10 volumes from 1806 to 1840. This monumental work contains nearly a thousand color plates of the flora of Greece as surveyed in the late 18th century by Sibthorp and Ferdinand Bauer, who illustrated them. Sibthorp himself never lived to see the printed Flora--he died in 1797 of an illness contracted on one of his trips--but he provided for its publication in his will. 

Sibthorp, John. Flora Graeca. v. 1 (1806). Contributed by the
Lloyd Library and Museum. https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/54016367.

Betsy has recorded the fascinating story of how the Lloyd Library came to possess a first edition of the Flora Graeca, one of only 25 printed. 

Another important title is Johann Kniphof's Botanica in originali, published in 12 volumes (1758-1764). The work uses a technique called "nature printing," which involves creating plates or engravings from direct impressions of actual plant specimens and using those plates to print images.

Kniphof, Johannes. Botanica in originali. v. 1 (1758). Contributed by the
Lloyd Library and Museum. https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/53840216.


Less an academic tome and more a physician's quick-reference herbal, the Botanicum medicinale is organized into single-page summaries of each plant, with engraved text around a colored illustration. 

Sheldrake, Timothy. Botanicum medicinale. c. 1768. Contributed by the
Lloyd Library and Museum. https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/53779797.

The complete list of titles submitted by the Lloyd Library to BHL:
Thank you to Betsy Kruthoffer, the Lloyd Library, and the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County for working with EABL to make these historic works available to everyone. 


By Patrick Randall
Community Manager
Expanding Access to Biodiversity Literature

From Jean-Baptiste Tavernier to the Smithsonian: Tracing the History of the Hope Diamond

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The Hope Diamond. Photo by Chip Clark, courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution. Photo ID 97-35270.

The Hope Diamond is one of the most famous gems in the world. It attracts millions of visitors to the National Museum of Natural History (NMNH) each year, making it one of the Smithsonian's most popular objects. Today (20 October 2017) marks the 20th anniversary of the Museum's Geology, Gems, and Minerals Hall, the present home of the Hope. NMNH is celebrating on social media with #GGMturns20.

But what is the history of this famous jewel? How did it come to be the Hope Diamond?

The known history of the stone begins with French gem merchant and traveler Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, whose travels through Asia in the 17th century are recorded in The Six Voyages of John Baptista Tavernier(1678), which has been digitized in BHL by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Libraries Program.

Title Page. Tavernier, Jean-Baptiste. The six voyages of John Baptista Tavernier. 1678. Digitized by the United States Geological Survey Libraries Program. http://s.si.edu/2wq4rIQ.

Born to a cartographer in 1605, Tavernier demonstrated a love for travel as early as his teens. Over the course of nearly forty years, Tavernier embarked on six major trips, or "voyages", to Persia and India, covering by his account 180,000 miles. He became a successful jewel merchant and, according to the Smithsonian's Mineral Sciences Department website, "the first European to describe the diamond mines in India." He first published an account of his journeys in 1676 with Les Six Voyages de Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, with an English translation by John Phillips appearing two years later in 1678.

Most likely during his sixth and final voyage to India between 1664-1668, Tavernier obtained a remarkable blue diamond weighing approximately 115 modern metric carats. Dubbed the "Tavernier Blue," the stone was certainly mined in India, but the specific mine is not known. Tavernier detailed this diamond in his Six Voyages.

Sketch of the "Tavernier Blue" (Upper Left, "A"). Tavernier, Jean-Baptiste. The six voyages of John Baptista Tavernier. 1678. Digitized by the United States Geological Survey Libraries Program. http://s.si.edu/2xkH0Vi.

In 1668 or 1669 (sources vary), Tavernier sold the diamond to Louis XIV of France for 220,000 livres. According to François Farges, curator of minerals and gems at the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, the stone was likely worth twice that amount.

Why would Tavernier sell the gem so cheaply?

According to Richard W. Wise, author of The French Blue, Tavernier received a patent of nobility, likely as part of the deal, which at the time could be obtained for approximately 400,000-500,000 livres. Additionally, as Wise writes, selling the jewel to the King of France was good publicity for Tavernier. Furthermore, given the economic state of many other European royals at the time, Tavernier was unlikely to receive a better offer.

Louis XIV later ordered court jeweler Jean Pittan the Younger to recut the stone to reflect a more European style favoring symmetry and brilliance over size and weight. The resulting 69 carat heart-shaped diamond became commonly known as the "French Blue." The diamond later became part of the Order of the Golden Fleece, a emblem of knighthood featuring many precious stones.

Color illustration of the Order of the Golden Fleece, containing the French Blue. Courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution. Creator: Pierre-André Jacqumin. https://mineralsciences.si.edu/_img/hope/GoldenFleece.jpg

Then, in 1789, France changed. The French Revolution ignited, and in 1791, the French Crown Jewels, including the Order of the Golden Fleece containing the French Blue, were turned over to the revolutionary government and moved to the royal storehouse, Garde-Meuble. The jewels were put on public display until 1792, when the French Blue, along with many other Crown Jewels, were stolen.

And here, the French Blue is lost.

Fast forward to London, 1812. A jeweler named John Francillon makes a note and sketches of a 45.5 carat blue diamond that he examined "by leave of" London diamond merchant Daniel Eliason. Known as the "Francillon Memo", this is the first reference to the Hope Diamond as it is known today.

It was American gemologist and former "special agent" for the USGS, George Frederick Kunz, who unearthed this important piece of the Hope's provenance when he discovered the "Francillon Memo" inside a copy of Pouget's Traité des pierres précieuses et de la maniere de les employer en parure (1762) whilst browsing in London's Quartich's bookshop.

The Francillon Memo inside a copy of Pouget's Traité des pierres précieuses et de la maniere de les employer en parure (1762), from the USGS Libraries collection. Photo by: Kelly Haberstroh.

Today, this memorandum, as well as the Pouget book it was discovered within, are part of the George F. Kunz Collection at the USGS Libraries Program. Containing many rare books on gemology, the folklore of gemstones through history, lapidary arts and archival gem trade records, the Library acquired this significant collection in 1933 after Kunz's death. The copy of Tavernier's Six Voyageswithin BHL is a part of the USGS Kunz Collection.

Interestingly, the "Francillon Memo" was dated September 19, 1812, just two days after the expiration of the statute of limitations for crimes committed during the French Revolution. In other words, France could no longer prosecute for reclamation of the diamond, should they happen to recognize the stone for what it truly was.

Whilst the connection between the French Blue and the Hope Diamond has long been suspected, in 2005 scientists at the Smithsonian announced that archival research and computer models had allowed them to conclude that the Hope was almost certainly cut from the French Blue.

The gem was most likely recut to hide its true identity. But who directed this to happen?

In 2009, Farges and his colleagues published research involving a lead model of the French Blue that suggests it may have been Henry Philip Hope, the diamond's namesake, who privately acquired and directed the stone to be recut sometime between 1792-1812, after which it eventually ended up with Eliason, a client of Hope's family firm. Hope would eventually officially acquire the diamond by 1839, after it was allegedly sold from George IV of England's collection following his death in 1830 (George IV's ownership of the Hope has never been officially confirmed).

In the early twentieth century, after Hope's great-grandnephew, Lord Francis Hope (who inherited the Hope Diamond), sold the stone in the midst of financial difficulties resulting from his lavish lifestyle, the diamond passed through multiple owners before it was finally donated by jeweler Harry Winston to the Smithsonian in 1958.

Models of the Hope Diamond in its three known states: Tavernier Blue (top), French Blue (bottom left), and the Hope Diamond (bottom right). Courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution. Creator Stephen Attaway. https://mineralsciences.si.edu/_img/hope/HopeModels.jpg

Thus stands the history of the Hope Diamond, from its appearance in Tavernier's Six Voyages to its exhibition at the Smithsonian. Thanks to the USGS Libraries Program, a record of the stone's earliest known history is freely available to the world through the Biodiversity Heritage Library.

You can view all of the illustrations from Tavernier's Six Voyages in the BHL Flickr.

About the USGS Libraries Program

The USGS Libraries Program, authorized by Congress in 1879, is the world’s largest earth and natural sciences library, providing services, collections, and expertise that are essential to the U.S. Geological Survey mission. The Libraries Program is made up of four branches that provide resources, collections, and services. The library collections include over 1,500,000 volumes, 2.500,000 maps, 30,000 field records, and 500,000 historical photos. Over thirty-six percent of the materials are unique to USGS, or available at ten or fewer libraries in the world. The rare collections can support research in biodiversity, specifically with literature from paleobotany and paleoclimatology as well as some surprising gems from early biological research both in the United States and across the world.

Sources

Buncombe, Andrew. 2005. "'Cursed' Hope Diamond Was Cut from French Stone, Test Shows." The Independent, February 11. Accessed September 13, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20090331235958/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/cursed-hope-diamond-was-cut-from-french-stone-tests-show-482819.html.

Farges, Francois, et al. 2009. "The French Blue and the Hope: New Data from the Discovery of a Historical Lead Cast." Gems & Gemology 45, no. 1 (Spring): 4-19. Accessed September 13, 2017. https://www.gia.edu/doc/SP09.pdf.

The Public Domain Review. 2017. "The Six Voyages of John Baptista Tavernier." Accessed September 13, 2017. http://publicdomainreview.org/collections/the-six-voyages-of-john-baptista-tavernier-1678/.

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. 2017. "Timeline." Hope Diamond, April 19. Accessed September 13, 2017. https://mineralsciences.si.edu/collections/hope/timeline/1668.htm.

Wikipedia. 2017. "John Francillon." September 1. Accessed September 13, 2017. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Francillon.

Wise, Richard W. 2009. "From the Sun King to the Smithsonian The Epic Journey of the Hope Diamond." The French Blue. Accessed September 13, 2017. http://thefrenchblue.com/article1.htm. 

In-copyright titles added in the 3rd quarter of 2017

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From July to September of this year, BHL received permission for 43 new in-copyright titles, all as part of the Expanding Access to Biodiversity Literature project. This is a slight increase over the numbers added in the first two quarters.

BHL licenses content under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 license

Below are the 43 titles added in the second quarter, in the order permission was secured. For those that have already been scanned or uploaded, links are available. Look for the rest as they're added to the collection; you can check the recent additions, or see all the permission titles available in BHL on the permissions page.

Titles in BHL have been digitized/contributed by the rights holders unless otherwise stated.

  • Journal of the Alabama Academy of Science
  • Green Thumb News
  • Green Thumb Newsletter
  • Mountain, Plain, and Garden
  • The Green Thumb
  • AAZK Bulletin
  • AAZK Newsletter
  • Ruptured Rhino
  • Avicultural Magazine
  • Oregon Flora Newsletter

  • Arboretum Bulletin
  • University of Washington Arboretum Bulletin
  • Washington Park Arboretum Bulletin
Lunds Botaniska Förening
  • Opera Botanica, v.42 (1977)
  • A Teaching Guide to the Trees and Shrubs of Greater New York, Including the Kinds Most Commonly Seen in Cultivation (1933 and 1947 editions)
  • Guide to Trees and Shrubs Based on Those of Greater New York: Native, Naturalized, and Commonly Cultivated Exotic Kinds
  • Leaflet / Leaflets
  • Plants and Gardens
  • Plants of the U.S. Military Academy, West Point, New York
Florida Exotic Plant Pest Council and Southeast Exotic Plant Pest Council
  • Wildland Weeds
University of Florida/IFAS Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants
  • Tulane Studies in Geology
  • Tulane Studies in Geology and Paleontology

  • Contributions in Marine Science
  • University of Texas at Austin Bulletins and Publications
  • African Violet Magazine
  • Ohio Biological Survey Notes
  • Bulletin
  • Bulletin of the Maryland Herpetological Society
  • Maryland Naturalist
  • Maryland: A Journal of Natural History
  • Proceedings
  • Bulletin of the Texas Ornithological Society
  • Occasional Publications
  • Agave
  • Saguaroland Bulletin
  • The Sonoran Quarterly
  • Memoirs of the Torrey Botanical Club
  • Proceedings of the XIIIth Ornithological Congress
  • The Daffodil Bulletin
  • The Daffodil Journal
BHL thanks the many individuals and organizations who have so generously allowed their publications to be digitized and made available to the world under open access. If there's a book or journal you would like to see in BHL, please let us know!

And as always, don't forget to follow BHL on Facebook, Twitter (@BioDivLibrary), InstagramPinterest, and Tumblr.

The Birds of the World, German Edition

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Bechstein, Johann Matthäus. Johann Lathams allgemeine Uebersicht der Vögel. Bd.2:t.2 (1795). German translation of John Latham's A General Synopsis of Birds. Digitized by Natural History Museum Library, London. http://s.si.edu/2hDSp9n.

At the end of the eighteenth century, the "father of German ornithology" began publishing a German translation of General Synopsis of Birds, an important work by John Latham, the "grandfather of Australian ornithology" [5][6].

This German edition, entitled Johann Lathams Allgemeine Uebersicht der Vögel ([1792] 1793-1812), was translated and edited by Johann Matthäus Bechstein (1757-1822). As his moniker suggests, Bechstein was a pioneer in German ornithology, having produced what is often regarded as the "first modern handbook of German birds,"Gemeinnèutzige Naturgeschichte[5]. With his translation of Latham's work, Bechstein made descriptions of worldwide bird species more accessible to German readers.

Bechstein, Johann Matthäus. Johann Lathams allgemeine Uebersicht der Vögel. Bd.1:t.1 (1793). German translation of John Latham's A General Synopsis of Birds. Digitized by Natural History Museum Library, London. http://s.si.edu/2gzJA0m.

Latham's General Synopsis of Birds, published in three volumes between 1781-1785 and supplements in 1787 and 1801, not only provided a natural history of the birds of the world but also importantly presented many Australian species to the European public for the first time [6].

Born at Eltham, Kent, England in 1740, Latham trained as a physician and set up a medical practice in Darenth at the age of 23. After he was established, Latham began a more concentrated study of natural history, amassing a library and collection of specimens to support his research. By 1800, Latham had recorded around 3,000 bird species [3].

Bechstein, Johann Matthäus. Johann Lathams allgemeine Uebersicht der Vögel. Bd.1:t.2 (1793). German translation of John Latham's A General Synopsis of Birds. Digitized by Natural History Museum Library, London. http://s.si.edu/2gB8gWx.

Latham's period of ornithological study coincided with the arrival in England of a wealth of specimens and drawings from Australia. These collections, resulting from Captain Cook’s voyages to Australia and Polynesia (1769-75), included many new-to-science bird species [1]. As a friend and correspondent of many of England's leading naturalists, Latham had access to these collections. He included descriptions and illustrations of some of these species within his General Synopsis of Birds [2].

Latham provided only vernacular descriptions for the species in his General Synopsisand its first supplement. In 1790, after realizing that he would only receive credit for naming the species if he provided Latin binomials under the Linnaean system, Latham published Index Ornithologicus, a systematic catalog assigning binomial names and taxonomic classifications to the birds in the three volumes and first supplement of General Synopsis[7]


Bechstein, Johann Matthäus. Johann Lathams allgemeine Uebersicht der Vögel. Bd.3:t.1 (1796). German translation of John Latham's A General Synopsis of Birds. Digitized by Natural History Museum Library, London. http://s.si.edu/2ziUgZ0.


Unfortunately, between 1788-1789, German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin had published an expanded edition of Linnaeus's Systema Naturae, providing Latin names for many of Latham's birds. These names have priority over those published in Index Ornithologicus, and as such Gmelin is credited as the first to scientifically describe many of the species first introduced through Latham's General Synopsis [2].

However, Latham is still the authority for many of the names in the Index and second supplement, and he is recognized as the first to scientifically describe many iconic species, such as the hyacinth macaw (Anodorhynchus hyacinthinus), and Australian species, including the emu (Dromaius novaehollandiae). His extensive contributions to Australian ornithology earned him the nickname the "grandfather of Australian ornithology" [2].

Bechstein, Johann Matthäus. Johann Lathams allgemeine Uebersicht der Vögel. Bd.4:t.1 (1811). German translation of John Latham's A General Synopsis of Birds. Digitized by Natural History Museum Library, London. http://s.si.edu/2zkmEu0.

The four volumes of Bechstein's Johann Lathams Allgemeine Uebersicht der Vögel constitute German translations of the three volumes and first supplement of General Synopsis as well as the Index Ornithologicus. In addition to the translation, Bechstein added "much additional matter" [7]. Each volume (or band) was issued in two parts (or theils). The plates are largely reproductions of those from General Synopsis, many of which Latham designed and etched himself [6].

Bechstein's legacy extends well beyond his translation of Latham's ornithological work. He was not only a pioneer in German ornithology, but he also contributed extensively to studies on forestry, founding the school of forestry at Waltershausen in 1795 and being named the director of the forestry school at Dreissigacker in 1800. He was also an early advocate for wildlife conservation, encouraging protection for many species then deemed pests, including bats [4].

Bechstein, Johann Matthäus. Johann Lathams allgemeine Uebersicht der Vögel. Bd.3:t.2 (1798). German translation of John Latham's A General Synopsis of Birds. Digitized by Natural History Museum Library, London. http://s.si.edu/2i9JoZh.

You can browse more of Bechstein's works in BHL.

Thanks to the Natural History Museum Library, London, you can freely explore all four bands, constituting eight volumes in total, of Johann Lathams Allgemeine Uebersicht der Vögel in BHL.

By Grace Costantino
Outreach and Communication Manager
Biodiversity Heritage Library

With contributions from:

Harriet Campbell Longley 
Researcher Services Assistant 
Natural History Museum Library and Archives, London

References

[1] Ashworth, William B. Jr., 2016. "Scientist of the Day - John Latham." Linda Hall Library, February 4. http://www.lindahall.org/john-latham/.
[2] Calaby, J.H. "Latham, John (1740–1837)." Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Published first in hardcopy 1967. http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/latham-john-2333/text3037.
[3] Jackson, Christine E., Ann Datta, and R.I. Vane-Wright. 2013. "Dr John Latham, F.L.S. and His Daughter Ann." The Linnean, 29(1), pp. 15-30.
[4] Johann Matthäus Bechstein. UpClosed. https://upclosed.com/people/johann-matthaeus-bechstein/.
[5] Mey, Eberhard. 2003. "Johann Matthäus Bechstein: The Father of German Ornithology."Rudolstädter nat. hist. Schr., 11, pp.63.
[6] Olsen, Penny. 2001. Feather and Brush: Three Centuries of Australian Bird Art. Collingwood: CSIRO Publishing. pp. 28.
[7] Zimmer, John Todd. 1926. Catalog of the Edward E. Ayer Ornithological Library, Part II. Chicago: Field Museum of Natural History. pp. 373-374.

Service Update: Internet Archive Service Restored 29 October 2017

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Status Update: 20:45 ET 29 October: Internet Archive is back online. Page images are correctly displaying in BHL. Thanks for your patience!

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Internet Archive is currently down. As a result, page images are not displaying in BHL. We apologize for the inconvenience, and we will update this post as soon as service is restored. #StayTuned

Join us for Seeds in the Stacks!

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Join us for Seeds in the Stacks, a Facebook Live tour at the USDA National Agricultural Library! We'll go behind-the-scenes to explore selections from the Library's collection of over 200,000 seed and nursery catalogs.

WHERE? 
WHEN? 
3 November 2017 @ 1pm ET

The USDA National Agricultural Library is the newest BHL Member. Since joining the consortium as an Affiliate in 2014, NAL has contributed over 2 million pages to the BHL collection, including a significant portion of its Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection. To date, NAL has contributed over 33,000 catalogs from this collection to BHL. The catalogs can be viewed in BHL as part of the Seed & Nursery Catalogs collection.

24th meeting of the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) Governing Board

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The 24th meeting of the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) Governing Board and associated events were held in Helsinki, Finland, 24-29 September. The Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) was represented at both the 14th GBIF Nodes Meeting (24-25 September 2017, by BHL Program Director, Martin R. Kalfatovic) and the Governing Board Meeting (26-27 September 2017, by BHL Chair, Constance Rinaldo).

BHL Head of Delegation, Constance Rinaldo

14th Global Nodes Meeting

At the Nodes meeting, the delegates were welcomed by Finnish GBIF Nodes Manager, Tapani Lahti. Following this, André Heughebaert, Chair, Nodes Committee, provided an introduction to the structure of the meeting and outlined the key goals:

  • Share information on progress in the nodes
  • Establish new collaboration models
  • Set priorities for the next 2 years

Heughebaert also outlined some elements of the GBIF 2018 Work Programme and noted that there are plans to include regional meetings as in the past. The GBIF Secretariat provide an overview of their activities, led by Tim Hirsch (Deputy Director, GBIF Secretariat). Hirsch's talk, "GBIF International landscape & New regions" was an overview of the GBIF international landscape, including participation by area and how different metrics can be used to measure participation and/or coverage of biodiversity data in GBIF. Some key things that GBIF is addressing are:

  • Address major geospacial gaps
  • Mobilize sampling-event data
  • Digitize natural history collections

Areas being focused on include the Caribbean (formation of an Atlas of Living Caribbean) and Pacific Islands (creating new participant options, including a meeting in Samoa).

Hirsch also noted that GBIF is the key reporting structure for Aichi Target 19  of the Convention on Biological Diversity. He also discussed GBIF's relation to the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) and how GBIF can engage in filling gaps in knowledge through data mobilization priorities.

Other Secretariat updates included:

  • Capacity Enhancement Support Programme (CESP) / Aisha Lolila Jensen (Program Officer for Participation and Engagement, GBIF Secretariat)
  • Biodiversity Information for Development (BID) / Laura Russell (Program Officer for Participation and Engagement, GBIF Secretariat)
  • Biodiversity Fund for Asia (BIFA) / Maofang Luo (Visiting Scientist from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, GBIF Secretariat)
  • IPT GBIF API and other tools / Laura Russell  (Program Officer for Participation and Engagement, GBIF Secretariat)
  • Presentation of the new GBIF Portal / Morten Høfft & Thomas S. Jeppesen (Web Developers, GBIF Secretariat)
The second session included short talks by members of the GBIF node community and included:

  • Description of the Antarctic Thematic GBIF Node, Strength & Weaknesses / Anton Van de Putte, Node manager, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) 
  • SiB Colombia role as a referent in the Latino American initiatives through GBIF (e.g. workshops, projects, mentoring) / Leonardo Buitrago, Node manager, Colombia 
  • Data management: Stable identifiers for collection specimens: What could the Nodes do to spread the use of this practice? / Walter Berendsohn & Anton Güntsch, Node manager, Germany 
  • Olaf Banki on the @catalogueoflife CoL+ which provides extended taxonomic catalogue & other goals with other partners incl @NLBIF @GBIF @Naturalis_Sci Species2000 ITIS 
  • GBIF Norway: Software tools for online citizen science volunteer digitization of museum herbaria collections (https://data.gbif.no/dugnad) By Christian Svindseth, Node staff, Norway
  • GBIF Norway: Terms selection tool for data publishers (https://data.gbif.no/dwcexcel) By Christian Svindseth, Node staff, Norway 


Swan wings

A tour of the Finnish Museum of Natural History's herbarium scanning project was also provided at the lunch break. The day concluded with a reception at the Finnish Museum of Natural History. Delegates were also privileged to get a behind-the-scenes tour of the museum's collections areas.

Reception with dinosaurs

Global Nodes meeting group photo
(Photo by Anne Mette Nielsen, CC BY-NC 4.0)

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24th GBIF Governing Board Meeting

GBIF Governing Board Chair Peter Schalk (Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden) and Donald Hobern (GBIF Executive Secretary) led the meeting and provided an overview of the past year. There was also a discussion of the GBIF Strategic Plan Goals and Work Programme updates. The plan goals were discussed in detail:

  • Strategic Plan Goal 1 – Empower Global Network
    “Ensure that governments, researchers and users are equipped and supported to share, improve and use data through the GBIF network, regardless of geography, language or institutional affiliation.” 
  • Strategic Plan Goal 2 – Enhance Biodiversity Information Infrastructure
    “Provide leadership, expertise and tools to support the integration of all biodiversity information as an interconnected digital knowledgebase.” 
  • Strategic Plan Goal 3 – Fill Data Gaps
    “Prioritize and promote mobilization of new data resources which combine with existing resources to maximize the coverage, completeness and resolution of GBIF data, particularly with respect to taxonomy, geography and time.” 
  • Strategic Plan Goal 4 – Improve Data Quality
    “Ensure that all data within the GBIF network are of the highest-possible quality and associated with clear indicators enabling users to assess their origin, relevance and usefulness for any application.” 
  • Strategic Plan Goal 5 – Deliver Relevant Data
    Ensure that GBIF delivers data in the form and completeness required to meet the highest priority needs of science and, through science, society.” 

The meeting also presented the winners of the 2017 Young Researchers Award:


In official business, the various GBIF Committee chairs (Science, Nodes, Budget) all reported. Hobern also presented the 2018 budget and work programme. Ireland was selected as the host for the 2018 GBIF 25th meeting of the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) Governing Board, and Governing Board positions were voted on. Results of the elections were:

  • Chair, Governing Board: Tanya Abrahamse, South Africa
  • 2nd Vice Chair, Governing Board: Mark Graham, Canada
  • Chair, Budget Committee: Peter Schalk, Netherlands
  • 1st Vice-Chair, Budget Committee: Liam Lysaght, Ireland
  • 2nd Vice-Chair, Budget Committee: Joanne Daly, Australia
  • Chair, Science Committee: Thomas M. Orrell, United States
  • 2nd Vice-Chair, Science Committee: Anders G. Finstad, Norway
  • 3rd Vice-Chair, Science Committee: Philippe Grandcolas, France

Governing Board meeting group photo
(Photo by Linda Tammisto, CC0 2017)

* * * * * 

Finnish National Seminar

All delegates and other guests were invited to the Finish National Seminar, "Finnish Biodiversity Information for the Benefit of Society".  The national seminar is a full-day event with talks from invited international and Finnish guest speakers including researchers of various fields as well as representatives of the natural resources administration. The programme gives broad insight into the various uses of openly available biodiversity data in research, governance, and teaching, and introduces the newly established Finnish Biodiversity Information Facility (FinBIF).

Professor Leif Schulman

Professor Leif Schulman, Director of the Finnish Museum of Natural History (and GBIF Head of Delegation for Finland) provided a brilliant opening to the Seminar (which was held in the beautiful Great Hall of the University of Helsinki) by pacing four meters across the stage and noting that it was this distance that birds in Finland are moving north due to climate change. Schulman also introduced Finnish Member of Parliment Ville Niinistö (Minister of the Environment in 2011-2014, led to the funding of FinBIF) who provided a governmental perspective on biodiversity.

GBIF Executive Secretary Donald Hobern provided an overview of GBIF's activities and goals and was followed by FinBIF Manager Kari Lahti who contextualized this work within the Finnish context. Dr. Vincent Smith (Head of Diversity & Informatics Division, Natural History Museum, London), provided a keynote talk, "The Digital Transformation of Biodiversity Institutions - a Changing Intellectual Business Model".

Executive Secretary Donald Hobern

Researchers from across Finland then provided a series of talks that delved deeper into programs and investigations that FinBIF, GBIF, and other global biodiversity research organizations are facilitating. The talks included:

  • Research Director Atte Moilanen (University of Helsinki & FinBIF)
  • Associate Professor Tuuli Toivonen (University of Helsinki)
  • University Researcher Sami Aikio (University of Oulu)
  • Post Doc Researcher Andrea Santangeli (Finnish Museum of Natural History)
  • Research Director Ilari Sääksjärvi (University of Turku)
  • Senior Curator Marko Mutanen (University of Oulu Biodiversity Unit)
  • Professor Jouko Rikkinen (Finnish Museum of Natural History & Faculty of Biosciences, University of Helsinki)
  • Ministerial Adviser Johanna Niemivuo-Lahti, Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry
  • Dr. Aino Juslén, Unit Director at the Finnish Museum of Natural History


* * * * * 

Other Meetings

Xu & Kalfatovic

The meetings also allowed BHL staff to meet with a number of our partners including Dr. Zheping Xu (BHL China) and Patricia Koleff (BHL México). Discussions with Michelle Price (Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève) and Chair of Consortium of European Taxonomic Facilities (CETAF AISBL) provided an opportunity to explore possible collaborations.

Rinaldo, Koleff, Kalfatovic

Rinaldo and Kalfatovic were also able to spend time with outgoing GBIF Science Committee Chair and BHL power user Rod Page to discuss ongoing work with the BHL portal. The GBIF meetings also provided a good opportunity to catch up with staff from iDigBio, including Deb Paul (Digitization and Technology Specialist).

* * * * * 

Other Resources




Amanita muscaria, Vallisaari, Finland

By:
Martin Kalfatovic
BHL Program Director
and
Constance Rinaldo
Chair, BHL Members' Council
Librarian of the Ernst Mayr Library of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University

Exporing Finnish biodiversity during GBIF 24

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Biodiversity Excursions

BHL Chair Constance Rinaldo and BHL Program Director Martin Kalfatovic each took advantage of the opportunities provided by our Finnish hosts of GBIF 24 for excursions to explore Finnish biodiversity. Rinaldo explored Nuuksio National Park and Kalfatovic, Vallisaari and Suomenlinna.

Nuuksio National Park
FinBio organized a trip to Nuuksio National Park which is located on the border of an oak forest zone and the southern boreal forest zone. Prominent in the landscape are valleys and gorges formed by glaciers and barren rocky hills covered by lichen and sparse pine forest. At some places the hills reach 110 meters above sea level.  This beautiful park is less than an hour’s drive from Helsinki and has wild trails and many lakes.  We wandered the trails with our guide from Green Window and hunted mushrooms under the tutelage of Tea von Bonsdorff from the Finnish Natural History Museum.  


Along the way we foraged on bilberries (probablyVaccinium myrtillus and lingon berries (Vaccinium vitis-idaea) while viewing the beautiful landscapes.  In the Helsinki market, bilberries were sold as “sour blueberries” alongside “sweet blueberries”.  While they were slightly more sour than a standard blueberry, they were delicious. The lingon berries were sweeter than the cranberries (Vaccinium macrocarpon) we find in eastern North America but still had a bite.


After about 2 hours of mushroom hunting, we arrived at the Kattila Lappih Hut where we were treated to a lunch of salmon and potatoes cooked over an open fire.  Lunch was served at long wooden tables with candles and we sat on benches covered with reindeer furs.

  
Following the delicious lunch we set off on our own.  Some of us continued to hunt mushrooms on foot.  Others headed out in canoes to explore the lake near the Green Window conference facility.

Cortinarius rubellus (deadly webcap)
                                                   
Vallisaari and Suomenlinna
Vallisaari is just 20 minutes by boat from the Market Square in Helsinki. The island was opened for the public last year – before that it was decades abandoned and the nature took its place. Vallisaari is the most diverse nature destination in the metropolitan area. The island’s fortifications, buildings, and a record-breaking range of species tell a tale of coexistence between humans and wild nature. The other attraction, fortress of Suomenlinna, is one of Finland’s UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Suomenlinna was built during the Swedish era as a maritime fortress and a base for the Archipelago Fleet.

Excursion to Vallisaari

By:
Martin Kalfatovic
BHL Program Director
and
Constance Rinaldo
Chair, BHL Members' Council
Librarian of the Ernst Mayr Library of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University

Announcing Five Webinars from BHL’s NDSR Residents!

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We are pleased to announce five upcoming webinars from BHL’s NDSR residents! Each resident has spent the past 10 months or so working hard on individual—yet inter-related—research projects to explore how we might best improve the features and functionality of BHL to incorporate new technologies and evolving best practices for digital libraries and the larger biodiversity community. 

The BHL NDSR Cohort, from left to right: Ariadne Rehbein, Pam McClanahan, Marissa Kings, Katie Mika, and Alicia Esquivel.

Each resident will be delivering a webinar, reporting on the results of their research to date along with their recommendations for BHL. The topics and schedule for the first three webinars are outlined below. Two more webinars will be announced shortly—stay tuned! At the end of this announcement, you can also see further information on joining the webinars.

Special thanks goes to iDigBio for generously granting the BHL NDSR residents use of their AdobeConnect system! 

BHL NDSR Webinar Schedule: Series One
Please mark your calendars and join us for the first three webinars:



November 7, 2017 at 2:00pm ET
Alicia Esquivel, Chicago Botanic Garden
Biodiversity Heritage Library: NDSR Collections Analysis
Seminar Room: iDigBio Conference Room ( 500 )
URL: http://idigbio.adobeconnect.com/room/

November 9, 2017 at 2:00pm ET
Katie Mika, Ernst Mayr Library, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University
Biodiversity Heritage Library: Transcriptions, Crowdsourcing and Metadata
Seminar Room: iDigBio Conference Room ( 500 )
URL: http://idigbio.adobeconnect.com/room/

November 15 at 2:00pm ET
Pam McClanahan, Smithsonian Libraries
Biodiversity Heritage Library: User Studies
Seminar Room: iDigBio Conference Room ( 500 )
URL: http://idigbio.adobeconnect.com/room/

Two more webinars will be offered with one in late November and the other in early December. Stay tuned for details on those as well!

New to Adobe Connect? We recommend following the link to the webinar about 15-20 minutes before the start time to install any add-ins as needed and to run the Audio Wizard. Please note that sometimes after running the Audio Wizard, you may still need to click on the picture of the microphone to connect the microphone. Should you have any questions, we’ll also be monitoring the chat throughout. Hope you can join us!

"Access to the original record...wherever we now work": Highlights from the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology field notes collection

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The Museum of Vertebrate Zoology (MVZ) at the University of California Berkeley is a collaborative partner in the Biodiversity Heritage Library Field Notes Project. The MVZ has committed to digitizing 1,500 of its historic field notes as part of this collaborative undertaking.

The MVZ’s storied field notebook collection was a concept developed at the founding of the museum by Joseph Grinnell, the MVZ’s founding director. From its earliest moments, Grinnell and the museum’s benefactress Annie Alexander discussed methods and curatorial best practices for the specimen collections and research. These ideas and principles around the organization of data recorded around collecting events evolved into Grinnell’s methodology for recording field notes. Early letters between Alexander and Grinnell in the later months of 1907 document their thoughtfulness, excitement, and collegial concern for establishing a research museum which would document the land fauna in the Western United States. Grinnell recognized that field notes would be the lasting primary source material that would document the biodiversity of the rapidly changing environment of the west in the early 20th century and in the future. In 1910 Grinnell famously wrote:
"At this point I wish to emphasize what I believe will ultimately prove to be the greatest value of our museum. This value will not, however, be realized until the lapse of many years, possibly a century, assuming that our material is safely preserved. And this is that the student of the future will have access to the original record of faunal conditions in California and the west, wherever we now work."[1]
The MVZ’s digitized field note book collection is a testament to Grinnell’s enduring legacy. From Grinnell himself, to the life works of Wilbur Mayhew, it is impossible to cover all of the amazing personalities represented but the following selections highlight some of my favorite individuals and collecting efforts from the first 300 books digitized.

Arctic Research Laboratory
Frank A. Pitelka was a UC Berkeley Professor and MVZ Curator of Birds whose prolific career included collaborative research projects at the Arctic Research Laboratory from 1955-1973. Along with his students, Prof. Pitelka’s Barrow, Alaska field notes record distributional data, life histories and behavioral observations of shorebirds, brown lemmings, and other groups across the Alaskan North Slope Borough.

Thomas Custer, Barrow Alaska, circa 1970.
The MVZ Archives has received much interest around field notes from this area and are excited to be able to provide access to this important record of the biodiversity of the Barrow region. Resurvey efforts in Alaska will be greatly supported by the field notes of Richard T. Holmes and the other Pitelka students who participated in the Arctic Research Laboratory.

Richard T. Holmes, Alaska species accounts, part 1, v4220, 1959-1964.

Archivists read many obituaries over their careers and every once in awhile, someone’s life shines like a light emanating from the pages of their memoriams, correspondence and photos. Chester Barlow is one of those individuals. Barlow, a good friend and Stanford colleague of Joseph Grinnell, tragically died at the age of 28. Henry Reed Taylor’s published memoriam to Barlow begins with, “Words cannot tell, and the pen falters as a thing which is feeble-and futile in an effort to express all that is comprehended in the simple words, “Barlow is gone.” [2]

And when Walter E. Bryant died in 1905, Walter K. Fisher began his memoriam to Bryant by stating, “Not since the lamented Chester Barlow passed away, nearly three years ago, has the Society suffered so severe a loss as from the recent death of our esteemed honorary member, Walter E. Bryant. [3]


"Chester Barlow in woods."

Barlow’s field notes and photographs are preserved in the MVZ Archives. His photos and field notes reveal a playful and eager bird enthusiast whose memory lived on in all who knew him. You can read Barlow’s entertaining Farallon Islands notebook on the Internet Archive.

Barlow, Chester. Ornithological Notebook of C. Barlow with Original Observations Only. (1892-1894).

Amelia S. Allen
The MVZ Archives featured Amelia S. Allen in its blog four years ago. Allen was one of the earliest women elected to the membership of the Cooper Ornithological Club. She served as Secretary of the Cooper Club’s Northern Division from 1916 to 1924. She then served as the group’s Vice President in 1925 and then elected President in 1926. Her field notes document the avifauna of the Berkeley region from 1901-1944 and include memoirs of life in Berkeley and membership in the Cooper Ornithological Club.

An example of Allen’s candid reflections from her 1930-1942 Memoir and Field notes volume.

Edward W. Gifford

Edward W. Gifford was the assistant curator of Ornithology at the California Academy of Sciences and later became a curator at the University of California's Museum of Anthropology. He kept an aviary at his Oakland home and donated his notes and birds to the MVZ throughout his life. But something very interesting caught my eye while prepping his volume for scanning. In his notes, he has a section recording his specimens that were burned in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. Gifford was participating in the California Academy of Sciences’ Galapagos Expedition when the earthquake and fire destroyed much of San Francisco, including the California Academy of Sciences. The Galapagos specimens collected by Gifford and fellow expedition members would go on to establish the new specimen collections of the newly rebuilt California Academy of Sciences.

Gifford, Edward W. Bird Notes: Aviary birds of the San Francisco Bay Region, v4289. (1904-1911).

Paul Elias

Paul Elias’s Guatemala field catalog and journal is a small and unassuming volume but it recounts an amazing journey filled with discoveries and critical data. Elias made this trip alone in the summer of 1974. He was 18 years old and an undergraduate at UC Berkeley, working at the MVZ. He collected two new genera of salamanders, later named Nyctanolis pernix and Bradytriton silus during this trip. Findings from this trip and the research of Prof. David B. Wake were published in a seminal paper in 1983. [4] It is difficult to imagine a trip like this taking place today. This is really only the beginning of Elias’s work with salamanders. Robin Moore wrote an excellent piece recounting Paul Elias and Jeremy Jackson’s return to the Guatemala’s Cuchumatane mountain range.

Written by:
Christina Velazquez Fidler, Archivist
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley

The BHL Field Notes Project is funded by the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR).



[1] Grinnell, Joseph (1910). "The Methods and Uses of a Research Museum,"Popular Science Monthly, 77, 163–169. https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/1809048

[2] Taylor, Henry Reed (1903). "In Memoriam: Chester Barlow (With Portrait),"The Condor, 5(1), 3-7. https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/53586237

[3] Fisher, W. (1905). "In Memoriam: Walter E. Bryant. Born 14th January, 1861. Died 21st May, 1905,"The Condor, 7(5), 129-131. https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/53610508

[4] Elias, P., & Wake, D. B. (1983). Nyctanolis pernix, a new genus and species of plethodontid salamander from northwestern Guatemala and Chiapas, Mexico. In Advances in herpetology and evolutionary biology. Essays in honor of Ernest E. Williams. https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/37028275


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