Andere Datenbanken und weitere Ressourcen zur Taxonomie und Systematik
Literatur-Recherche online Spezielle botanische Bibliographien und Literatur-Datenbanken
Literatur-Recherche online Allgemeine botanische und allgemeine Kataloge
Andere Datenbanken und weitere Ressourcen zur Taxonomie und Systematik
Angiosperm
Phylogeny Website, by P. F. Stevens, University of
Missouri, St Louis, and Missouri Botanical Garden.
Within the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC) three nucleotide sequence database systems, the
EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Database (EU), GenBank (USA)
and the DNA Database of
Japan (DDBJ) collect portions of the total sequence data reported worldwide, and all new and
updated database entries are exchanged between them on a daily basis.
Phylogeny
programms listed by Joe Felsenstein, Department of
Genome Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle. "194 of the
phylogeny packages, and 16 free servers, that I know about. It is an
attempt to be completely comprehensive. ... The programs listed
include both free and non-free ones; in some cases I do not know
whether a program is free. I have listed as free those that I knew
were free; for the others you have to ask their distributor."
Flowering
Plant Family Identification, ActKey (by Harvard
University Herbaria) partly illustrated implementation of the punched card system for flowering plant family
identification by Hansen & Rahn (1969). – Another
electronic form of the same key is by Ray Phillips at the
University of Oklahoma and at Colby College."
The families of flowering plants, Descriptions, Illustrations,
Identification, and Information Retrieval by L. Watson and
M. J. Dallwitz.
Index to Plant Chromosome Numbers (Missouri Botanical
Garden) "aims to extract and index original plant
chromosome numbers of naturally occurring and cultivated plants
published throughout the world. ... Data from published indexes from
1979 onward are available for consultation through this facility". An
Index to Chromosome Numbers in Asteraceae,
cointaining the data of all printed indexes, is provided by Kuniaki
Watanabe, Kobe University, Japan.
Inside
Wood database – "The InsideWood project [of the Libraries and the Department of Wood and Paper Science, at North Carolina State University (NCSU), Raleigh, NC, USA]
integrates wood anatomical information from the literature and original observations into an internet-accessible database useful for research and teaching. The InsideWood database contains brief descriptions of woody dicots (hardwoods) from more than 200 plant families, and is searchable by an interactive, multiple-entry
key."
PalDat
Palynological Database of the Department of Ultrastructure
Research and Palynology, University of Vienna "At present PalDat provides 7866 pictures of 1011 recent species, belonging to 603
genera, and 124 pictures of 32 fossil forms, belonging to 20 fossil
genera" [August 2006]. "The database includes a
detailed description of the pollen grain (shape in dry and hydrated
condition, apertural details, wall-stratification and ornamentation,
pollen coatings and cellular condition), images of each pollen grain
(LM, SEM and TEM) and basic literature on each genus. Search forms
allow to query the database in any combination of pollen grain
characters, including images and literature. Moreover, a number of
print-outs are available, e.g., standardized pollen grain
description of each taxon, literature and/or images to each genus, a
key to a selected family, herbarium labels". – Photopal
"is an interactive bank of digital images of modern pollen grains and of their morphological description realized from modern pollen banks (Montpellier, Paris, Lyon, Stockholm, ..) with the help of
the C.N.R.S. ( INSU), the Ministère de l'Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche,
the Elf Company, the Lyon 1 and Montpellier 2 Universities."
The
Linnean Collections – "The Linnean Society is the
custodian of Linnaeus' collections, which comprises specimens of
plants (14,000), fish (168), shells (1,564) and insects (3,198)
acquired from the widow of Carl Linnaeus in 1784 by James Edward
Smith as well as Smith's own plant (17,000 specimens) and insect
(5,800) collections. The collections also include the library of
Linnaeus (some 1600 volumes) and around 3000 letters and
manuscripts.It is the Linnean Society's aim to make available its
primary research material in digital formats to support taxonomic
and conservation efforts worldwide as well as providing public
pleasure and enjoyment."
Index
Herbariorum, "a joint project of the International
Association for Plant Taxonomy (IAPT) and The New York Botanical
Garden (NYBG), is a detailed directory of 3,220+ public herbaria of
the world and the 9,775+ staff members associated with them.
Included in the on-line edition of Index Herbariorum is information
for 3,240+ herbaria in 165 countries and 9,869+ staff members
associated with these herbaria. Information for over 80% of the
herbaria has been updated, and 581 herbaria have been added since
the eighth edition of INDEX HERBARIORUM.Information is available for
searching by institution, city, state, acronym, staff member,
correspondent, and research specialty. Telephone and fax numbers and
e-mail and URL addresses are included. The Index is fully searchable
on research specialty, so it also serves as a PLANT SPECIALISTS
INDEX."
Index
of Botanical Publications (Harvard University Herbaria) enthält die Daten des "Botanico
Periodicum Huntianum (BPH)" (Lawrence & al. 1968), "Botanico
Periodicum Huntianum/Supplementum (BPH/S)" (Bridson and Smith
1991), darüberhinaus die Titel, Titelabkürzungen und
Publikationsdaten aus "Taxonomic Literature, ed. 2 (TL-2)"
(Stafleu & Cowan 1976, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1986, 1985, 1988), and "Taxonomic
Literature, ed. 2, Suppl. 1-3 (TL-2/S)" (Stafleu & Mennega
1992, 1993, 1995) sowie die enstprechenden Daten weiterer, nicht in
diesen Werken enthaltener Publikationen. –
BPH online (Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation) "is
a fully indexed and searchable database
documenting (as comprehensively as possible) periodicals published
between 1665 and the present, which routinely address the plant
sciences. BPH Online is composed of the datasets used to
create the print editions of Botanico-Periodicum-Huntianum,
its supplement, and BPH-2. BHP Online is essentially a
Web-based version of BPH-2, with some corrections, and
searching and browsing options intended to make it more interrogable".
The
Index of Botanists (Harvard University Herbaria)
"plant name authors, collectors, and publication authors are
combined into a single resource". – Botanical
Authors Database (IPNI) plant name authors and their
standard abbreviation. – Cyclopaedia
of Malesian collectors (Nationaal Herbarium Nederland). – Botanical
Collectors Database: Africa (Natural History Museum London). –
Australian Plant Collectors and Illustrators
IndExs –
Index of Exsiccatae (Botanische Staatssammlung München) –
"IndExs comprises information on titles, abbreviations and bibliography of
exsiccatae. Exsiccatae are defined here as "published, uniform, numbered sets of preserved specimens distributed with printed
labels" (Pfister 1985). Please note that there are two similar
Latin terms: "exsiccata, ae" is feminine and used for a set of dried specimens as defined
above, whereas the term "exsiccatum, i" is neutral and used for dried specimens in
general."
eFloras
(by Harvard University Herbaria), a compilation of electronic
Floras.
ActKey
(by Harvard University Herbaria), a compilation of
electronic identification keys for flowering plants.
International
Field Guides (by Diane Schmidt, University of Illinois), a
database of field guides to plants and other organisms.
Botanic Gardens
Conservation International The Gateway to the World's
Botanic Gardens Provides, e.g. a directory of the
botanic gardens worldwide.
International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants (Melbourne Code) 2012, by McNeill, J., Barrie, F. R.,
Buck, W. R., Demoulin, V., Greuter, W., Hawksworth, D. L., Herendeen, P. S., Knapp, S., Marhold, K.,
Prado, J., Prud'homme van Reine, W. F. , Smith, G. F., Wiersema, J. H. & Turland, N. J.
(Ed. & Compilers), adopted by the Eighteenth International Botanical Congress Melbourne, Australia, July 2011;
electronic version of the original English text. The site Conserved
plant names: proposals and disposals provides "an
index to the names proposed for conservation or rejection since the
first proposals in 1892. The record for each name provides the
citation for the relevant publications and indicates the final
disposition of the proposal".
The
GEOnet Names Server (GNS) und Alexandria
Digital Library Gazetteer Server. Hervorragende
Werkzeuge zur Lokalisierung von Fundorten.
FloraWeb –
Daten und Informationen zu Wildpflanzen und Vegetation Deutschlands
– Hervorragendes Portal zu den Datenbanken des Bundesamtes
für Naturschutz zu Flora, Vegetation, Arten- und Naturschutz in
Deutschland (schließt e.g. die Daten von Wisskirchen & Haeupler
1998: "Standardliste der Farn- und Blütenpflanzen Deutschlands"
ein).
SYNTHESYS
Portal zur Flora Deutschlands (BioCASE) – "Dieses
Internetportal ... ermöglicht die Suche nach Daten zu einer
bestimmten Pflanzenart sowie erweiterte Suchanfragen z.B. nach
Fundorten, Sammlern oder Zeiträumen. Über eine erweiterte
Suchfunktion werden die in den floristischen Standardlisten
genannten Synonyme in die Suche mit einbezogen. Die Daten werden von
verschiedenen Institutionen wie Herbarien oder Florendatenbanken über
das GBIF-Netzwerk (Global Biodiversity Information Facilitiy) zur
Verfügung gestellt."
Genetic Resources (BIG)
"Das Bundesinformationssystem Genetische Ressourcen (BIG)
bildet Informationen über Wild- und Kulturpflanzen in
Deutschland aus verschiedenen dezentralen Datenbanken ab."
Themen: Pflanzenname, Eigenschaften, Vorkommen und Verbreitung, Gefährdung,
Nutzung, Schutz, Abbildungen.
Florenliste von Deutschland: Gefäßpflanzen – Die
federführend von K. P. Buttler (Frankfurt) zusammengestellte Florenliste für Deutschland enthält unter
anderem mehrere Tausend geprüfte infraspezifische Namen, die in IPNI nicht erfasst sind, zudem die
deutschen Namen und erstmals auch alle bekannten Daten zu unbeständigen Neophyten und Hybridsippen.
Hinzu kommt eine Aufschlüsselung nach Bundesländern.