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  Informateur OPTIMA Newsletter 
  
 
 
  OPTIMA Newsletter - 33(e) / Informateur OPTIMA - 33(e) 
  Printed version ISSN 0376-5016 33 (1)-(16) (July 1998), published by the
  Secretariat of OPTIMA. 
            Web version installed June 16, 1999. Page editors    
            
  inside this issue, 
  Recommendations for Botanical Database Design 
  The Spanish Lichen Herbaria 
  The Med-Checklist of Mediterranean Lichens 
 
 
  Contents of N°. 33(e)
  Nouvelles de
  lOPTIMA / OPTIMA News 
  Conservation News - MIPSGs Top 50 
  ITN News - Recommendations for Botanical Database Design; Attention Mediterranean Botanical Database Holders 
  Herbarium News - The Spanish Lichen Herbaria 
  Lichen News - The Med-Checklist of Mediterranean Lichens 
  Web News - Directory of Medicinal Plant Conservation 
  Personalia - OPTIMA Medals; 1997
  FONDENA Prize 
  Meetings - IX OPTIMA Meeting 
  Announcements 
  Notices of Publications - OPTIMA; Cryptogams; Floras; Flower
  books; Floristic inventories and
  checklists; Excursions; Chorology; Regional studies of flora and vegetation;
  Applied botany; Conservation topics, Red Data books; Gardens and institutes; Bibliography and documentation; Symposium proceedings 
    
  questionaires and forms
  Field News
  Work Questionnaire:   In order to be able to provide you
  the best and most exhaustive information on botanical expeditions taking place in the
  Mediterranean area, please take a few minutes and collaborate by filling out this
  questionnaire. 
              Attention Mediterranean Botanical 
                Database Holders: The ITN Commission is assembling 
                a list of existing and projected botanical databases for the Mediterranean 
                area. This effort strongly depends on the co-operation of OPTIMA 
                members. If your database or dataset includes specimen records, 
                please participate in the BioCISE survey. 
  
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  NOUVELLES DE
  L'OPTIMA 
    
  DE PARIS, EN ROUTE POUR UN NOUVEAU MILLÉNAIRE 
  Les Colloques de l'OPTIMA ont toujours été une excellente
  occasion d'établir des contacts entre groupes, de partager des idées et de donner le
  départ à de nouvelle initiatives, et le 9ème Colloque de l'OPTIMA qui vient de se tenir
  à Paris en est un bon exemple. Les réunions des commissions de l'OPTIMA au début du
  congrès furent très productives, et des avancées significatives de leurs programmes
  peuvent être envisagées dans un futur proche. Une brève actualisation de leurs
  activités est présentée dans ces pages. Si vous souhaitez être informé de façon plus
  approfondie, ou collaborer activement aux activités d'une commission particulière, vous
  êtes prié de contacter le secrétaire correspondant. Une liste des membres et
  secrétaires de chaque commission se trouve à la fin de ce chapitre. Dans ce numéro, une
  place particulière est donnée au monde stupéfiant des lichens méditerranéens. Faites
  nous parvenir vos commentaires sur ce sujet comme sur d'autres, nous consacrerons de la
  place dans cet informateur pour faire connaître vos opinions. 
  J.M. Iriondo 
    
  COMITÉ INTERNATIONAL 
  En 1997, les membres du Comité ont approuvé le rapport annuel et le
  rapport financier pour 1996, soumis par le Secrétaire au nom du Président et du Conseil
  Exécutif. Le Comité a également élu S. Pajarón et F. Fernández-González comme
  vérificateurs des comptes pour 1997. 
  En 1998, le Comité a approuvé la recommandation de la Commission des
  Prix d'attribuer la Médaille d'Or de l'OPTIMA au Pr. W. Greuter. 
  Au 9ème Colloque de l' OPTIMA de Paris, le Comité a décidé : 
  
    - De dissoudre le Comité de Programme pour le 9ème Colloque de l'OPTIMA, en le
      remerciant pour les services rendus, et de mettre en place un nouveau Comité de Programme
      pour le 10ème Colloque de l'OPTIMA qui doit se tenir à Palerme en 2001.
 
    - De mettre en place deux nouvelles Commissions: la Commission mycologique, dont la
      mission est de promouvoir les études et les programmes de recherche sur les Champignons,
      et la Commission Sisyphus, chargée de coordonner la participation de l'OPTIMA à la
      nouvelle Initiative Euro-Méditerranéenne en Systématique Végétale.
 
    - De nommer S. Pajarón et F. Fernández-González vérificateurs des comptes pour 1998.
 
    - De soutenir l'appel de la Commission pour la diffusion et la mise sur réseau de
      l'Information à collaborer à la préparation d'un répertoire des Bases de données
      Méditerranéennes existantes ou en projet.
 
    - D'approuver la participation de l'OPTIMA au projet de la Fondation pour l'Herbarium
      Mediterraneum d'organiser une exposition sur l'histoire des explorations et de la
      recherche botaniques en région méditerranéenne à Palerme en 2001, à l'occasion du 10ème
      Colloque de l'OPTIMA.
 
   
    
  CONSEIL 
  Le Conseil a approuvé la recommandation de la Commission des Prix
  d'attribuer les Médailles d'Argent de l'OPTIMA au Dr. Mes pour "Origin and evolution
  of the Macaronesian Sempervivoideae (Crassulaceae)." 1995; au Dr.
  Díaz-Lifante et au Pr. Valdés pour "Revisión del género Asphodelus L.
  (Asphodelaceae) en el Mediterraneo occidental." 1996; et aux Dr. Raffaelli et Dr.
  Baldoin pour "Il complesso di Biscutella laevigata L. (Cruciferae)
  in Italia." 1997. 
  Au 9ème Colloque de l'OPTIMA de Paris, le Conseil a
  procédé aux nominations suivantes : 
  
    - V. Heywood et B. de Montmollin comme membres de la Commission pour la Conservation des
      Ressources végétales
 
    - G. Venturella comme membre de la Commission pour l'Herbarium Mediterraneum
 
    - C. Del Prete comme membre de la Commission pour la diffusion et la mise sur réseau de
      l'Information.
 
   
    
  DÉCÈS 
   Pr. Dr. D. Lausi, Trieste, Italie, décédé en 1997.  
   Pr. Dr. F.A. Stafleu, Utrecht, Hollande, décédé en 1997. 
   Pr. Dr Dmitrios Voliotis, Athènes, Grèce, décédé en Avril
  1998. 
    
  LE POINT SUR LES COMMISSIONS 
    
  LE TROISIÈME RÉPERTOIRE SUR LA RECHERCHE EN
  COURS EST EN ROUTE! 
  Au 9ème Colloque de l'OPTIMA tenu à Paris en
  Mai 1998, la Commission pour la recherche en cours a décidé de lancer une nouvelle
  campagne destinée à produire un Répertoire nouveau et actualisé des recherches en
  cours. Ce troisième Répertoire comprendra non seulement les projets de recherche en
  cours, mais également les domaines d'intérêt et les compétences des botanistes. Un
  nouveau questionnaire a été mis au point, vous le trouverez dans ce numéro de
  l'Informateur OPTIMA. Prenez quelques minutes pour le remplir SVP! 
  Les informations collectées alimenteront une base de données, dont il
  est envisagé d'extraire une version imprimée et une diffusion sur Internet. Si vous
  êtes intéressé à participer de façon plus active à ce projet, prenez contact SVP
  avec : Dr. Stephen L. Jury, Secretary, OPTIMA Commission for Current Research, Centre
  for Plant Diversity and Systematics, Plant Science Laboratories, The University of
  Reading, Whiteknights, Reading, RG6 6AS, UK. Tel. +44 (0)118 975 3676,
  E-mail:s.l.jury@reading.ac.uk  
    
  ÉTAT D'AVANCEMENT DE "PAYSAGES
  VÉGÉTAUX DU BASSIN MÉDITERRANÉEN" 
  Le livre "Paysages végétaux du Bassin
  méditerranéen" est en cours de préparation par la Commission pour la diffusion des
  connaissances sur les plantes méditerranéennes. Un chapitre d'essai a été rédigé et
  revu par les membres de la Commission, et distribué aux membres de la Commission et aux
  collaborateurs. Plus précisément, les auteurs des chapitres concernant les introductions
  générales, Israël et la Jordanie, l'Italie, l'Espagne, la Syrie et le Liban, et la
  Turquie sont au travail et un premier jet de ces chapitres devrait être terminé pour le
  15 Septembre 1998. Des contacts sont actuellement en cours pour la France, les Balkans et
  l'Afrique du Nord. 
  Pour plus d'informations, prendre contact avec le Pr. Uzi Plitmann,
  Department of Botany The Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91904 Israel. E-mail: uzi@vms.huji.
  ac.il 
    
  LA BULGARIE ET LE SUD DE LA FRANCE 
  ACCUEILLERONT LES DEUX PROCHAINS ITINERA MEDITERRANEA 
  A la dernière réunion de la Commission pour la recherche
  floristique, il a été décidé que les Itinera Mediterranea des deux prochaines années
  se dérouleraient en Bulgarie et en France. Il a également été convenu que dorénavant
  deux Itinera Mediterranea seraient organisés par période de trois années de façon à
  ce qu'ils ne coïncident pas avec les Colloques de l'OPTIMA qui se tiennent tous les trois
  ans. Ainsi, l'Iter suivant se tiendra probablement en Arménie en l'an 2002. La durée des
  expéditions sera de deux ou trois semaines selon la destination. Le nombre minimum de
  membres de l'expédition a été fixé à 10, et le maximum à 12. En dessous de 10
  participants, l'expédition n'aura lieu que si les organisateurs sont en mesure de couvrir
  les dépenses supplémentaires. 
  Pour plus d'informations, prendre contact avec le Pr. Benito Valdés.
  Dpto. Biología Vegetal y Ecología Universidad de Sevilla Apdo. 1095 E-41080 Sevilla
  Spain. Tel.: +34 954 557047; Fax: +34 954 557059; E-mail: bvaldes@cica.es 
    
  NOUVELLES DU TRAVAIL DE TERRAIN: LE RETOUR! 
  La rubrique "Field Work News" est en cours de
  réactivation et tous les membres de l'OPTIMA seront sollicités de donner des
  informations sur leurs expéditions par un questionnaire. Les renseignements obtenus
  seront organisés en base de données et rendus accessibles sur Internet. 
  Pour plus d'informations, contacter  : Pr. Benito Valdés. Dpto.
  Biología Vegetal y Ecología Universidad de Sevilla Apdo. 1095 E-41080 Sevilla Spain.
  Tel.: +34 954 557047; Fax: +34 954 557059; E-mail: bvaldes@cica.es 
    
    
  UNE NOUVELLE INITIATIVE: 
  LA COMMISSION MYCOLOGIQUE DE L'OPTIMA 
  Au cours de la dernière réunion du Comité International, la
  création d'une Commission mycologique de l'OPTIMA a été décidée. La Commission
  encouragera les études et les programmes de recherche sur différents thèmes
  mycologiques, tels que : biodiversité et conservation, inventaire et cartographie
  des espèces, élaboration de données chorologiques et de listes rouges, systématique et
  phylogénie des taxons d'intérêt particulier, écologie des communautés fongiques,
  écophysiologie, symbioses et interactions avec les plantes hôtes, génétique des
  populations et processus de spéciation, utilisation et exploitation potentielles
  d'espèces sélectionnées pour la culture des Champignons comestibles, bioremédiation
  des déchets et résidus agro-industriels, et production de fourrage. 
  La Commission mycologique de l'OPTIMA s'est réunie pour la première
  fois à Paris le 13 Mai. Il a été convenu que la Commission commencerait à travailler
  à la compilation d'un Catalogue des espèces méditerranéennes de Champignons en Italie,
  France, Espagne et Grèce. Une proposition sera soumise à l'Union Européenne pour
  subventionner un projet sur la biodiversité fongique dans les habitats méditerranéens.
  A cet effet, un groupe de travail de coordinateurs régionaux a été mis en place. 
  Pour plus d'informations, contacter : Pr. Silvano Onofri; Tuscia
  University, via S. Camillo de Lellis, Blocco D, I-01100 Viterbo Italy.  
    
  INTENSE ACTIVITÉ A L'HERBARIUM MEDITERRANEUM 
  L'Herbarium Mediterraneum de Palerme travaille dur dans
  différents domaines d'activité et s'affirme comme une institution clé dans les études
  de Botanique méditerranéenne. Voici quelques-unes des dernières nouvelles : 
  1.- Sur le front des publications, trois volumes de Bocconea,
  financés par la fondation pour l'Herbarium Mediterraneum, doivent être publiés en 1998.
  Un quatrième volume de Bocconea sera publié avec un financment extérieur. Le
  volume 8 de Flora Mediterranea sera également publié vers la fin de cette année.
   
  2.- La Fondation a approuvé un accord avec l'OPTIMA destiné à
  faciliter l'acquisition de spécimens d'herbier par l'Herbarium Mediterraneum en
  autorisant certains paiements à l'OPTIMA sous forme de spécimens d'herbier. Cette
  possibilité sera offerte aux botanistes des pays circum-méditerranéens. Des
  informations détaillées sur cet accord figurent dans un encadré séparé à la fin de
  la rubrique Nouvelles de l'OPTIMA dans cet informateur. 
  3.- La Fondation pour l'Herbarium Mediterraneum financera une
  exposition sur l'histoire des explorations botaniques de la région méditerranéenne.
  Cette exposition sera organisée à Palerme et coïncidera avec le 10ème
  Colloque de l'OPTIMA. Ultérieurement, l'exposition pourrait circuler dans les
  institutions botaniques d'autres pays. Une publication sur ce même sujet est également
  envisagée. 
    
  NOUVELLES OFFRES DE LA COMMISSION DES
  PUBLICATIONS DE L'OPTIMA  
  Un total de quatre volumes de Bocconea sont prévus pour
  publication en 1998. Ces volumes traiterons de la Flore du Maroc, des plantes menacées du
  Maroc, du genre Anthemis et des résultats de l'Iter Mediterraneum en Sicile et à
  Chypre. Comme cela a été signalé plus haut, le volume 8 de Flora Mediterranea
  sera également publié vers la fin de l'année. 
  Les Actes du 8ème Colloque de l'OPTIMA à Séville sont
  maintenant disponibles pour les membres institutionnels avec une remise de 50% et pour les
  membres ordinaires avec 25% de remise sur le prix normal. Acta Botanica Malacitana
  est également offert aux membres de l'OPTIMA avec 33% et 50% de réduction. Consulter la
  rubrique "Publications Offer" au début de cet Informateur pour plus de
  détails. 
  Les membres de la Commission sont à la recherche de nouvelles
  publications à proposer aux membres de l'OPTIMA. Les offres qui en résulteront seront
  publiées dans les numéros à paraître de l'Informateur OPTIMA. 
    
    
  COLLABOREZ AVEC LA COMMISSION DE L'OPTIMA POUR
  LA DIFFUSION 
  ET LA MISE SUR RÉSEAU DE L'INFORMATION! 
  L'importance de l'acquisition et de la diffusion de données
  sous forme électronique est actuellement unanimement reconnue. La Commission est prête
  à soutenir de tels efforts : 
  
    - En fournissant un forum sur Internet pour l'échange d'informations. Ceci a été
      partiellement réalisé par le Site WWW de l'OPTIMA actuellement localisé à Berlin. Le
      BGBM de Berlin a également proposé de fournir des listes de diffusion automatiques par
      courrier électronique pour les Commissions et autres groupes de l'OPTIMA.
 
    - En réunissant une liste de recommandations pour la réalisation de bases de
      données botaniques, incluant la définition des données de niveau terrain et des sources
      pour données normalisées. Ceci afin de garantir autant que possible la compatibilité
      entre nouvelles bases de données, permettant de les mettre en réseau ultérieurement.
 
    - En élaborant une liste des bases de données botaniques existantes ou en projet pour la
      région méditerranéenne. Le succès dépend fortement du degré de coopération des
      membres de l'OPTIMA. Les propriétaires de bases ou de séries de données susceptibles
      d'être utiles à d'autres sont une fois de plus encouragés à se manifester. Si vos
      bases ou séries de données comportent des enregistrements de spécimens, vous êtes
      prié de participer au projet BioCISE (voir http://www.bgbm.fu-berlin.de/
      Biocise/TheProject/Survey/default.htm). Pour d'autres bases de données vous devriez
      communiquer les renseignement suivants au président de la Commission ou au Secrétariat
      de l'OPTIMA : nom de la base de données, contenu, disponibilité, adresse de la
      personne responsable.
 
   
    
  ATLAS DES ORCHIDÉES MÉDITERRANÉENNES POUR
  L'AN 2001! 
  La Commission pour la cartographie des Orchidées de la
  région méditerranéenne a continué à accumuler des informations nouvelles et espère
  éditer un atlas chorologique des orchidées méditerranéennes pour le prochain Colloque
  de l'OPTIMA. Les données seront présentées sous forme de 20-30 cartes à grille UTM
  avec des informations sur la morphologie, l'iconographie, le statut de protection et la
  biologie. 
    
  COLLABORATION ENTRE LA CCRV ET LE MISPG 
  La Commission de l'OPTIMA pour la Conservation des
  ressources végétales va collaborer avec le Mediterranean Islands Specialist Plant Group
  de l'UICN sur de futurs projets de conservation de plantes dans la région
  méditerranéenne. 
    
    
  I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX ET... X 
  Le Comité de Programme du 10ème Colloque de l'OPTIMA a
  été mis en place par le Comité International au cours de sa dernière réunion à Paris
  et s'est déjà mis au travail pour préparer le prochain Colloque de l'OPTIMA qui se
  tiendra à Palerme en l'an 2001. 
    
    
  COLLABOREZ AVEC 
  L'HERBARIUM MEDITERRANEUM 
  POUR GAGNER 
  DES COTISATIONS A L'OPTIMA 
  ET DES VOLUMES DE BOCCONEA 
    
  Par accord avec la Fondation de l'Herbarium Mediterraneum, il est
  désormais possible de payer ses cotisations à l'OPTIMA et d'acheter des volumes de Bocconea
  en envoyant des spécimens d'herbier à l'Herbarium Mediterraneum de Palerme. Cette
  possibilité est d'ores et déjà applicable selon les modalités suivantes : 
  
    - Cette offre concerne en premier lieu nos membres domiciliés dans un pays óu la
      disponibilité de devises est limitée ou leur transfert à l'étranger compliquée et
      laborieux; les membres d'autres pays ne sont cependant pas exclus. 
 
    - Seuls des échantillons provenant de l'aire globale suivante pourront être acceptés:
      pays circum-méditerranéans sauf la France et l'Italie, plus le Portugal et la Bulgarie;
      îles atlantiques (Macaronésie); et domaine du "Flora orientalis" de Boissier
      (notamment le Moyen-Orient, la Transcaucasie et la Crimée). De préférence, ces
      échantillons proviendront du pays de résidence (s'il fait partie de l'aire globale
      mentionnée ci-dessus). 
 
    - Elle est ouverte aux membres de l'OPTIMA des pays circumméditerranéens, y compris la
      Bulgarie, l'Ukraine et le Portugal.
 
    - Les spécimens d'herbier doivent être en bon état et comporter des informations
      complètes avec des étiquettes lisibles etdéfinitives. Sauf accord préalable écrit,
      les spécimens doivent venir du pays de résidence du participant. L'Herbarium
      Mediterraneum se réserve le droit de retourner les spécimens jugés de qualité
      insuffisante.
 
    - Chaque spécimen d'herbier vaudra 1.67 SFr. Chaque livraison consistera en un minimum de
      15 planches d'herbier. Quand un groupe de botanistes de la même institution prévoit
      d'envoyer des spécimens d'herbier, une expédition groupée est préférable.
 
    - Chaque collaborateur joindra une copie du bordereau de livraison ci-joint comportant son
      nom, le nombre de spécimens d'herbier envoyés, la somme payée et la destination du
      crédit (cotisation à l'OPTIMA ou achat de volumes de Bocconea).
 
    - Le paquet contenant les spécimens d'herbier et la lettre seront envoyés à : Pr.
      F. Raimondo, Dipartimento di Scienze Botaniche dell'Università, Via Archirafi 38, I-90123
      Palermo, Italy.
 
    - Les frais d'expédition seront remboursés aux expéditeurs par l'Herbarium
      Mediterraneum.
 
    - A la fin de chaque année, l'Herbarium Mediterraneum virera à l'OPTIMA le montant des
      cotisations gagnées par les participants pendant l'année.
 
   
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
  Bordereau à joindre au paquet de spécimens d'herbier (un bordereau
  par participant). 
    
  Nom:  
    
   
    
  Institution:  
    
    
   
  Adresse:  
    
   
  Nombre de spécimens d'herbier ( ) x 1.67 SFr/ spécimen = ___________
  SFr.de crédit. 
  Je souhaite utiliser ce crédit pour payer ma cotisation à l'OPTIMA
  (25.-SFr/year): _______ années de cotisation 
  Je souhaite acheter un exemplaire de Bocconea vol. _____ au
  tarif réduit pour les membres de l'OPTIMA (voir les prix au début de l'Informateur
  OPTIMA) 
    
   
  OPTIMA NEWS 
    
  FROM PARIS TOWARDS A NEW MILLENIUM 
  The OPTIMA Meetings have always provided an excellent opportunity
  for establishing contacts among groups, sharing ideas and starting new initiatives and the
  IX OPTIMA Meeting held in Paris is a good example of this. The meetings held by the OPTIMA
  Commissions at the beginning of the congress were highly productive and significant
  advances are envisioned in their programs in the near future. On these pages, a short
  update of their activities is presented. If you wish to have further information or to
  actively collaborate in the activities of a certain commission please contact the
  corresponding secretary. A list with the members and secretaries of each commission is
  provided at the end of this section. Special treatment is given to the amazing world of
  Mediterranean lichens in this issue. Send us your comments on this and other topics and we
  will dedicate some space in our next newsletter to publish your opinions. 
  J.M. Iriondo 
    
  INTERNATIONAL BOARD 
  In 1997, the Board members approved the annual report and the financial
  report for 1996, submitted by the Secretary on behalf of the President and the Executive
  Council. The Board also elected the auditors, S. Pajarón and F. Fernández-González, for
  1997. 
  In 1998, the Board approved the recommendation of the Prize Commission
  to attribute the OPTIMA Gold Medal to Prof. W. Greuter. 
  At the IX OPTIMA Meeting held in Paris the Board made the following
  decisions: 
  
    - To disband the Programme Committee for the IX OPTIMA Meeting, with thanks for services
      rendered, and to establish a new Programme Committee for the X OPTIMA Meeting to be held
      in Palermo in 2001.
 
    - To set up two new Commissions: The Commission on Fungi, with the mandate to promote
      studies and research programmes on mycological topics and the Sisyphus Commission, with
      the task of coordinating the participation of OPTIMA in the new Euro-Mediterranean
      Initiative in Plant Systematics.
 
    - To elect S. Pajarón and F. Fernández-González as auditors for 1998.
 
    - To support the call for collaboration of the Commission for Information Transfer and
      Networking in the preparation of a directory of existing or projected Mediterranean
      databases.
 
    - To endorse the participation of OPTIMA in the Herbarium Mediterraneum Foundation
      initiative to hold an exhibition on the history of botanical explorations and
      investigation in the Mediterranean in Palermo in 2001 in coincidence with the X OPTIMA
      Meeting.
 
   
    
  EXECUTIVE COUNCIL 
  The Council approved the recommendation of the Prize
  Commission to award the OPTIMA Silver Medals to Dr. Mes for "Origin and evolution of
  the Macaronesian Sempervivoideae (Crassulaceae)."1995; Dr. Díaz-Lifante and
  Prof. Valdés for "Revisión del género Asphodelus L. (Asphodelaceae)
  en el Mediterraneo occidental." 1996; and, Dr. Raffaelli and Dr. Baldoin for "Il
  complesso di Biscutella laevigata L. (Cruciferae) in Italia." 1997. 
  At the IX OPTIMA Meeting held in Paris the Council made the following
  nominations: 
  
    - V. Heywood and B. de Montmollin for membership on the Commission for the Conservation of
      Plant Resources
 
    - G. Venturella for membership on the Herbarium Mediterraneum Commission
 
    - C. Del Prete for membership on the Commission for Information Transfer and Networking
 
   
    
  DEATHS 
   Prof. Dr. D. Lausi, Trieste, Italy, died in 1997.  
   Prof. Dr. F.A. Stafleu, Utrecht, Holland, died in 1997. 
   Prof. Dr Dmitrios Voliotis, Athens, Greece, died in April 1998. 
    
  UPDATES ON COMMISSIONS 
    
  THE THIRD REGISTER OF CURRENT RESEARCH IS NOW
  UNDER WAY! 
  At the IX OPTIMA Meeting held in Paris in May 1998, the
  Commission for Current Research decided to launch a new campaign to produce a new and
  updated Register of Current Research. The Third Register will include not only current
  research projects but also research interest and the expertise of botanists. A new
  questionnaire has been formulated and is included in this issue of OPTIMA Newsletter.
  Please take a few minutes to fill it out. 
  The information will be gathered and put in a database format. From
  this database, a published printout and its implementation on the Internet is envisioned.
  If you are interested in a more active participation in this project, please contact: Dr.
  Stephen L. Jury, Secretary, OPTIMA Commission for Current Research, Centre for Plant
  Diversity and Systematics, Plant Science Laboratories, The University of Reading,
  Whiteknights, Reading, RG6 6AS, UK. Tel. +44 (0)118 975 3676, E-mail:
  s.l.jury@reading.ac.uk 
    
  PROGRESS ON  
  "VEGETAL LANDSCAPES OF THE MEDITERRANEAN BASIN" 
  The book "Vegetal Landscapes of the Mediterranean
  Basin" is being prepared by the Commission for the Diffusion of Knowledge on
  Mediterranean Plants. A sample chapter has been completed, revised by the members of the
  Commission, and distributed among Commission members and contributors. Moreover, authors
  of chapters on general introductions, Israel and Jordan, Italy, Spain, Syria and Lebanon
  and Turkey are working and a first draft of these chapters is expected to be completed by
  15 September 1998. Contacts are now under way to find authors for France, the Balkans and
  North Africa.  
  For further information, please contact Prof. Uzi Plitmann, Department
  of Botany The Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91904 Israel. E-mail: uzi@vms.huji. ac.il 
    
  BULGARIA AND SOUTH FRANCE WILL HOST THE NEXT TWO ITINERA MEDITERRANEA 
  At the last meeting of the Commission for Floristic Investigation,
  it was decided that the Itinera Mediterranea for the next two years would take place in
  Bulgaria and France. It was also determined that from now on two Itinera Mediterranea
  would be organized every three years in such a way that they do not coincide with the
  OPTIMA Meetings that are held once every three years. Thus, the following Iter will
  tentatively take place in Armenia in the year 2002. The length of the expeditions will be
  two or three weeks depending on the destination. The minimum number of members for the
  expeditions was set at 10 and the maximum at 12. If the number of participants is less
  than 10, the expedition will only take place if the organizers want to cover the extra
  expenses. 
  For further information please contact: Prof. Benito Valdés. Dpto.
  Biología Vegetal y Ecología Universidad de Sevilla Apdo. 1095 E-41080 Sevilla Spain.
  Tel.: +34 954 557047; Fax: +34 954 557059; E-mail: bvaldes@cica.es 
    
  FIELD WORK NEWS IS BACK AGAIN! 
  Field Work News is being reactivated and all OPTIMA members
  will be asked for information on their expeditions in a questionnaire. The collected data
  will be structured into a database and made available on the Internet. 
  For further information please contact: Prof. Benito Valdés. Dpto.
  Biología Vegetal y Ecología Universidad de Sevilla Apdo. 1095 E-41080 Sevilla Spain.
  Tel.: +34 954 557047; Fax: +34 954 557059; E-mail: bvaldes@cica.es 
    
  A NEW INITIATIVE: THE OPTIMA COMMISSION ON FUNGI 
  At the last meeting of the International Board, the creation of an
  OPTIMA Commission on Fungi was approved. The Commission will promote studies and research
  programs on different mycological topics, such as: biodiversity and conservation, species
  monitoring and mapping, elaboration of occurrence-distribution data and red lists,
  systematics and phylogeny on taxa of special interest, ecology of fungal communities,
  ecophysiology, symbioses and host plant interactions, genetic population and speciation
  processes, potential use/exploitation of selected species for mushroom cultivation,
  bioremediation of agro-industrial wastes/residues, and fodder production. 
  The OPTIMA Commission for Fungi held its first meeting in Paris on 13
  May. It was decided that the Commission would start working on the compilation of a
  checklist of Mediterranean fungal species in Italy, France, Spain and Greece. A proposal
  will be submitted to the European Union for funding a project on fungal biodiversity in
  Mediterranean habitats. For this purpose a working group with regional coordinators has
  been established. 
  For further information please contact: Prof. Silvano Onofri; Tuscia
  University, via S. Camillo de Lellis, Blocco D, I-01100 Viterbo Italy.  
    
  INTENSE ACTIVITY AT THE HERBARIUM
  MEDITERRANEUM 
  The Herbarium Mediterraneum at Palermo is working hard in
  several areas and consolidating itself as a key institution in the study of Mediterranean
  Botany. Here is some of the latest news: 
  1.- On the publishing front, three volumes of Bocconea, financed
  by the Herbarium Mediterraneum Foundation, are expected to be published throughout 1998. A
  fourth volume of Bocconea will be published with external funding. Volume 8 of Flora
  Mediterranea will also be published by the end of this year.  
  2.- The Foundation has approved an arrangement with OPTIMA to
  facilitate the acquisition of herbarium specimens for the Herbarium Mediterraneum through
  an exchange of herbarium specimens for OPTIMA fees. This offer will be available to
  botanists from Circummediterranean countries. Detailed information on this arrangement can
  be found in a separate box at the end of the OPTIMA News section in this
  newsletter. 
  3.- The Herbarium Mediterraneum Foundation will fund an exhibit on the
  history of botanical explorations in the Mediterranean. This exhibit will be organized in
  Palermo and will coincide with the X OPTIMA Meeting. At a later date the exhibit could be
  taken to botanical institutions in other countries for display. A publication on this
  subject is also envisioned.  
    
  NEW OFFERS FROM THE  OPTIMA PUBLICATIONS
  COMMISSION 
  A total of four volumes of Bocconea are planned to be
  published in 1998. In these volumes the Flora of Morocco, the threatened plants of
  Morocco, the genus Anthemis and the results of the Iter Mediterraneum to Sicilia
  and Cyprus will be covered. As mentioned before, volume 8 of Flora Mediterranea
  will also be published by the end of this year. 
  The Proceedings of the VIII OPTIMA Meeting in Sevilla are now available
  to institutional members at a 50% discount and to ordinary members at a 25% discount off
  the regular price. Acta Botanica Malacitana is also being offered to OPTIMA members
  with a 33% and a 50% discount. Check the "Publications Offer" section at the
  beginning of the newsletter for further details. 
  Commission members are searching for new publication offers for OPTIMA
  members. The resulting offers will be published in forthcoming issues of OPTIMA
  Newsletter. 
    
  COOPERATE WITH THE  OPTIMA COMMISSION  
  FOR INFORMATION TRANSFER AND NETWORKING! 
  The importance of data acquisition and dissemination in
  electronic form is now commonly recognized. The ITN Commission is ready to help in such
  efforts by: 
  
    - Providing an Internet-based forum for the exchange of information. This has been
      achieved in part by the OPTIMA World Wide Web Site currently stationed in Berlin. The BGBM
      in Berlin has also offered to provide automated e-mail distributions lists (listservs) for
      OPTIMA Commissions and other groups.
 
    - Assembling a list of recommendations for the design of botanical databases,
      including field-level data definitions and sources for standardized data content. This is
      to ensure as much as possible the compatibility of new databases, making their later
      networking feasible.
 
    - Assembling a list of existing and projected botanical databases for the Mediterranean
      area. This effort strongly depends on the co-operation of OPTIMA members. Holders of
      databases or datasets, which may be useful to others, are once more urged to let us know.
      If your database or dataset includes specimen records, please participate in the BioCISE
      survey (See http://www.bgbm.fu-berlin.de/Biocise/TheProject /Survey/default.htm). For
      other databases please send the following data to the Commissions chair or to the
      OPTIMA Secretariat: Database name; content; availability; responsible persons
      address.
 
   
    
  ATLAS OF MEDITERRANEAN ORCHIDS BY THE YEAR
  2001! 
  The Commission on the Mapping of Orchids in the
  Mediterranean Area has continued gathering new information and hopes to print an atlas
  showing the distribution of Mediterranean orchids by the next OPTIMA Meeting. The data
  will be presented in the form of 20-30 maps in a UTM grid with information on morphology,
  iconography, protection status and general biology. 
    
  JOINT COLLABORATION BETWEEN CCPR AND MISPG 
  The OPTIMA Commission for the Conservation of Plant
  Resources will collaborate with the Mediterranean Islands Specialist Plant Group of the
  IUCN in future plant conservation initiatives in the Mediterranean area. 
    
  I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX AND ... X 
  The X OPTIMA Meeting Programme Committee was established by the
  International Board at its last meeting in Paris and it is already working on the
  preparation of the next OPTIMA Meeting which will take place in Palermo in year 2001. 
  v v v v  
    
  COLLABORATE WITH THE HERBARIUM
  MEDITERRANEUM 
  AND EARN OPTIMA MEMBERSHIP FEES 
  AND BOCCONEA VOLUMES 
  Through an agreement with the Herbarium
  Mediterraneum Foundation it is now possible to pay OPTIMA membership fees or to purchase
  volumes of Bocconea by sending herbarium specimens to the Herbarium Mediterraneum
  in Palermo. This offer will be in effect from now on and will be regulated as follows: 
  - 
    This offer concerns primarily those members who live in countries with limited currency
      availability or from which money transfer is difficult or laborious; members from other
      countries are not however excluded.
 
    - Only specimens from the following areas are acceptable: peri-Mediterranean countries
      (except Italy and France), plus Portugal and Bulgaria, the Atlantic Islands (Macaronesia),
      and the domain of Boissier's "Flora Orientalis" (in particular the Middle East,
      Transcaucasia and the Crimea). Normally, material from the country of residence (if part
      of this area) will be given preference.
 
    - The offer is open to OPTIMA members from Circummediterranean countries including
      Bulgaria, the Ukraine and Portugal. 
 
    - The herbarium specimens must be in good condition and contain complete information with
      readable, durable labels. Specimens must come, save prior written agreement, from the
      participants country of residence. The Herbarium Mediterraneum reserves the right to
      return specimens judged to be of insufficient quality.
 
    - Each herbarium specimen will be worth 1.67 SFr. Each delivery will consist of a minimum
      of 15 herbarium sheets. When a group of botanists from the same institution plan to send
      herbarium specimens, a joint delivery is preferable.
 
    - Each collaborator will include a copy of the enclosed form specifying his/her name, the
      number of herbarium specimens sent, the credit earned and whether they wish to use it to
      pay OPTIMA membership fees or to purchase Bocconea volumes.
 
    - The package containing the herbarium specimens and the letter will be sent to: Prof. F.
      Raimondo, Dipartimento di Scienze Botaniche dell'Università, Via Archirafi 38, I-90123
      Palermo, Italy.
 
    - Postage costs will be refunded to the senders by the Herbarium Mediterraneum.
 
    - At the end of each year, the Herbarium Mediterraneum will transfer the sum of OPTIMA
      membership fees earned by participants during the year to OPTIMA.
 
   
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
  Form to be included with the delivery of herbarium specimens. One
  form per participant. 
    
    
  Name:  
    
   
    
  Institution:  
    
   
    
  Address:  
    
   
    
  Nº of herbarium specimens ( ) x 1.67 SFr / specimen = ___________ SFr.
  of credit. 
    
  I wish to use this credit to pay my OPTIMA membership fees (25.-SFr /
  year): _______ years of membership 
    
  I wish to purchase a copy of Bocconea vol. _____ at the OPTIMA
  member reduced price (see prices at the beginning of OPTIMA Newsletter) 
    
    
   
  CONSERVATION NEWS 
    
  MIPSGS TOP 50  
  The Mediterranean Islands Plant Specialist Group of
  the IUCN is preparing a list with the fifty most endangered plants of the Mediterranean
  Islands. The progress and the prospects of this initiative were reviewed at the last
  meeting held in Paris on 12 May 1998. At the same meeting, the preparation of a programme
  on Mediterranean island flora to be submitted to the IUCN Office for the Mediterranean was
  also discussed. The OPTIMA Commission for Conservation of Plant Resources also
  participates in this program. 
  For further information on these initiatives, please contact Bertrand
  de Montmollin  bio conseils, Serre 5, CH-2000 Neuchâtel, Switzerland. Email:
  biolconseils @access.ch 
    
   
  ITN NEWS 
    
  RECOMMENDATIONS
  FOR BOTANICAL DATABASE DESIGN 
  by W. Berendsohn 
    
  During its meeting in Paris, the OPTIMA Commission for Information
  Transfer and Networking recognised the paramount importance of compatible database designs
  for future networking of databases in the Mediterranean area. As a first step, the
  Commission decided to provide a selection of standards and available standard data that
  can be used in the design of new databases.  
  The Taxonomic Databases Working Group (TDWG) has endorsed several of
  the standards cited below (see http://plants.usda.gov/npdc/18tdwg.html for more
  information). An extensive list of references regarding data models and standards for
  biological collections is published and constantly updated under
  http://www.bgbm.fuberlin.de/TDWG/acc/Referenc.htmA list of available computer programs for
  collection management is also being built as part of the activities of TDWG's Accessions
  Subgroup (http:// www.bgbm.fu-berlin.de/TDWG/acc/Software.htm). 
  The following list will be maintained as a part of the OPTIMA Website
  under http://www.bgbm.fu-berlin.de/OPTIMA/ITN/recommendations.htm. 
  For geographical areas, the schemes brought forward for Med-Checklist
  and Flora Europaea have been omitted, because they will be replaced by the results from a
  working group within the Euro-Med Plant Base Project. Likewise, differing standards or
  updates are currently being developed for economic botany, authors and literature
  citations. The web pages will constantly be updated to keep you informed of the latest
  developments. 
  1. DATABASE STANDARDS: 
  Field-level database exchange standards for herbaria: 
  
    Conn, B.J. (1996) (ed.): HISPID3. Herbarium Information Standards
    and Protocols for Interchange of Data.Version 3. Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney. [TDWG
    standard] [Electronic version: http://www.rbgsyd.gov.au/hiscom/ hispid_ top.html] 
   
  Field-level database exchange standards for botanical gardens: 
  
    IUCN/WWF (1987): The International Transfer Format (ITF) for Botanic
    Garden Plant Records. Plant Taxonomic Database Standards No. 1. Hunt Institute for
    Botanical Documentation, Pittsburgh. [See Wyse Jackson (1997) for latest version.] [TDWG
    Standard] 
    Wyse Jackson, D. (compiler) (1997): International Transfer Format for
    Botanic Garden Plant Records (version 2.00 draft 3.2.). Botanic Gardens Conservation
    International, Richmond. [proposed TDWG standard] [Electronic version:
    http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/BGCI/news.htm] 
   
  Field-level standards for botanical names: 
  
    Bisby, F. (1995): Plant names in botanical databases. Plant
    Taxonomic Database Standards No. 3, Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation,
    Pittsburgh. [TDWG Standard].  
    
   
  Taxonomic descriptions: 
  
    Dallwitz, M.J. & Paine, T. A. (1986): Users guide to the DELTA
    system. CSIRO Division of Entomology Report No. 13, pp. 3-6. [TDWG Standard]
    [Updates and further information under http://biodiversity. uno.edu/delta/] 
      
    
   
  2. STANDARD DATA: 
  Authors of plant names: 
  
    Brummit, R.K. & C.E. Powell 1992. Authors of plant names. Royal
    Botanic Gardens Kew. [TDWG Standard] [Searchable database: http://www.
    rbgkew.org.uk/web.dbs/webdbsintro.html. Dataset can be purchased from RBG Kew and is
    included in the Index Kewensis CD-ROM.] 
   
  Bibliography: 
  
    Bridson, G.D.R. & Smith, E. R. (1991):
    Botanico-Periodicum-Huntianum/supplementum. Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation,
    Pittsburgh. 1068 pages. [TDWG standard as to abbreviations for titles of periodicals. To
    be used in conjunction with Lawrence (1968).] 
    Lawrence et al. 1968. Botanico-periodicum-huntianum. Hunt Institute for
    Botanical Documentation, Pittsburgh. [TDWG Standard]  
    Stafleu, F. A. & Cowan, R. S. (1976-): Taxonomic literature, ed. 2
    and its Supplements. Reg. Veg. 125 etc. [Key fields for this standard are currently being
    automated as a cooperative project between the Royal Botanic Garden-Edinburgh, the USDA,
    NRCS, National Plant Data Center and IAPT.] [TDWG Standard]  
   
  Geography, Ecology, and Conservation:  
  
    FGDC (1997): Appendix I: National Vegetation Classification System: The
    Upper Levels (Table). FGDC Vegetation Classification and Information Standards. Federal
    Geographic Data Committee, Vegetation Subcommittee. Federal Geographic Data Committee
    Secretariat, Reston. [150K Table under http://www.nbs.gov/fgdc.veg/standards/
    appendix1.htm . Part of the standard vegetation classification system for use by U.S.
    Federal Agencies and their cooperators.] 
    Hollis, S. & Brummitt, R. (1992): World Geographical Scheme for
    Recording Plant Distributions. Plant Taxonomic Database Standards No. 2, International
    Working Group on Taxonomic Databases for Plant Sciences (TDWG). Hunt Institute for
    Botanical Documentation, Pittsburgh. [TDWG Standard] [Electronic version available under
    http://www.bgbm.fu-berlin.de/TDWG/geo/ default.htm] 
    ISO (1988): Codes for the representation of names of countries. Third
    edition; ISO 3166: 1988 Aug 15; 53 p. [A list of all the countries represented in this
    version of ISO-3166 along with their 2-letter, 3-letter, and numeric codes, prepared for
    the MUSE project: gopher://muse.bio.cornell.edu:70/00/ standards/iso/iso-3166.] 
    ISO (1994): Codes from ISO 3166. Updated by the RIPE Network
    Coordination Centre, in coordination with the ISO 3166 Maintenance Agency at DIN Berlin.
    http://www.chemie.fu-berlin.de/outerspace/mirror-packages/german/iso-3166.html 
    ISO (1997): Some Codes from ISO 3166. Updated by the RIPE Network
    Co-ordination Centre. Source: ISO 3166 Maintenance Agency. http://www.
    chemie.fu-berlin.de/outerspace/mirror-packages/ german/iso-3166.html 
    IUCN (1994): IUCN Red List Categories. Prepared by the IUCN Species
    Survival Commission. As approved by the 40th meeting of the IUCN Council, Gland,
    Switzerland, 30 November 1994. 
    Leon, C., Mackinder, D., Rooney, P. & Synge, H. (1995): Plant
    occurrence and status scheme (POSS). World Conservation Monitoring Centre,
    Cambridge, UK. Unpublished. [TDWG Standard] 
    Takhtajan, A. (1986): Floristic Regions of the World. Floristic regions
    of the world. University of California Press. Bishen Singh, Dehra Dun. [Pp. vii-xiii
    accepted as standard phytogeographical regions by TDWG.]  
   
  Economic botany: 
  
    Cook, E. M. (1995): Economic Botany Data Collection Standard.
    Prepared for the International Working Group on Taxonomic Databases for Plant Sciences
    (TDWG). Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. [TDWG Standard] 
   
  Institutional abbreviations: 
  
    Heywood, C. A., Heywood, V. H. & Wyse Jackson, P. S. (1990):
    International Directory of Botanical Gardens. Koeltz, Koenigstein. 
    Holmgren, P. K., Holmgren, N. H. & Barnett, L. C. (1990): Index
    Herbariorum, Pt. 1: The Herbaria of the World (ed. 8). Regnum Vegetabile 120. [TDWG
    Standard] [An updated version - not yet accepted as TDWG standard, is being made available
    under http://www.nybg.org/bsci/ih/ ih.html]  
   
  § § § § §  
    
    
  ATTENTION MEDITERRANEAN BOTANICAL DATABASE
  HOLDERS !! 
  The ITN Commission is assembling a list
  of existing and projected botanical databases for the Mediterranean area. This effort
  strongly depends on the co-operation of OPTIMA members. Holders of databases or datasets,
  which may be useful to others, are once more urged to let us know. If your database or
  dataset includes specimen records, please participate in the BioCISE survey (See
  http://www.bgbm.fu-berlin.de/Biocise/TheProject /Survey/default.htm). For other databases
  please send the following data to the Commissions chair or to the OPTIMA
  Secretariat:  
  ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
    
  Database name:  
    
    
    
   
  Content:  
    
    
    
   
  Availability:  
    
   
  Responsible persons address:  
    
    
   
    
  Back to General Index 
   
  HERBARIUM
  NEWS 
  edited by PALOMA BLANCO 
    
  THE SPANISH LICHEN HERBARIA 
  by ANA ROSA BURGAZ 
  Data on Spanish lichenology history
  is scarce, although works by a few authors such as Bellot (1967), Silvestre &
  García-Rowe (1982) and Llimona (1991) have contributed to this knowledge. 
  History in Spain has been marked by many tragic incidences during the
  last two centuries, facts which remain reflected in our Science History and likewise in
  our Lichenology. A consequence of this has been the dispersion and loss of many historical
  herbaria. Although his main work was never published, Simón de Rojas Clemente (1777-1827)
  was considered the first Spanish lichenologist, (Llimona, 1991). Other botanists had also
  shown their interest in lichenology studies before 1850 (Colmeiro, 1858). At the end of
  the last century a new uneasiness for this subject clearly appeared. In 1896, Líquenes
  de Andalucía by Francisco de las Barras was published. Afterwards, other short works
  were published by Blas Lázaro e Ibiza, Benito Vicioso and especially, P. Longinos Navás
  with his El Género Parmelia en España. At the beginning of this century, new
  collections and explorations took place. Manuel Llenas Fernández studied Cataluña and
  Central Spain, and Luis Crespí Jaume with the Portuguese lichenologist, G. Sampaio,
  studied Pontevedra lichens. This activity was dramatically stopped because of the Civil
  War from 1936-1939. In the seventies, Crespo (1973) and Llimona (1974) started the current
  period in Spanish lichenology. Since 1985, thanks to the financial aid from the Dirección
  General de Investigación, Ciencia y Tecnología (DGICYT), among others, it has been
  possible to explore new areas. Quite a lot of lichen herbaria have appeared which will
  allow us to publish the Spanish Lichenological Flora in the near future. 
  There are lichen herbaria in most of the countrys research
  centres, but the main funds are held in those where, nowadays, there is a group of active
  lichenologists working (Sancho, 1995).  
  Even though the following herbaria list is not exhaustive, we have
  tried to include the main institutions and private herbaria we know. Information has been
  gathered by personal contact consulting all the different herbarium curators, who were
  kind enough to give us all the needed information. 
  Institutional herbaria are indicated by their Index Herbariorum
  abbreviations and private herbaria by the names or abbreviations used by their owners. 
  
    - 
    BC (Institut Botànic, Barcelona). Contains over 3,550 sheets which formally
      constitute the Museo de Historia Natural de Barcelona old collection, with material
      from Central Europe and Nordic countries, received as exchange from 1830 until 1926. It
      also keeps the Roger-Ruy Werners (1901-1977) lichen collection, with 2,820 sheets
      including 9 lichenicolous fungi and 196 of his lichen type specimens, mainly from north
      Africa, some from central Europe and a few from Spain (Llimona 1979).
 
    - 
    BCC-LICH (Facultat de Biología, Universitat de Barcelona). Started in 1962, it
      holds nearly 85,000 specimens with a good representation of the Mediterranean element.
      14,000 of them are registered and numbered sheets, some type material and some exsiccatae
      from Follmann and Vezda. At the same time, it holds more than 59,000 specimens from
      private collections of the teachers of the Departamento de Biología Vegetal, among them
      Dr. Llimonas collection with nearly 12,000 sheets, and 59,000 registered but
      unnumbered sheets collected by botanists including X. Ariño, M. Barbero, M. Boqueras, A.
      Canals, M. Giralt, A. Gómez-Bolea, N. Hladun and P. Navarro-Rosines.
 
    - 
    BIO (Facultad de Ciencias, Vitoria). Started in 1985, it holds over 4,000 sheets of
      lichens, mainly saxicolous, from northern Spain. One type specimen. All material was
      collected by Gustavo Renobales. 
 
    - 
    FCO (Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Oviedo). It holds 130 sheets of lichens
      from Asturias, Barcelona and Palma de Mallorca, collected at the beginning of the
      seventies by Rosa María Simó.
 
    - 
    FCV (Facultade de Ciencias do Mar e Bioloxía, Universidade de Vigo). It holds 2,600
      sheets of epiphyte lichens from Galicia, northwest Spain, collected by Josefina Alvarez.
 
    - 
    GDA-Líquenes (Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada). The old herbarium
      keeps 10 sheets from Mariano Amo y Moras (1809-1894) collection. This Spanish
      botanist was influenced by the Swede E. Fries. The namely Colección de la Academia
      Malagueña de las Ciencias keeps over 50 sheets of lichen samples, collected by
      different Spanish botanists during the last century, and a folder with Harmands
      (1918) exsiccata. The present collection, started in 1978, holds 4,500 sheets of lichens,
      some type material, mainly saxicolous and terricolous, from the Iberian Peninsula and
      Morocco, primarily collected by Manuel Casares Porcel. G. Fulgensia is well
      represented.
 
    - 
    LABORATORI DE BOTÀNICA (Dpto. Biología, Fac. Ciències, Universitat Illes
      Balears). Started in 1979, it contains 700 sheets of lichens mainly from the Balearic
      Islands and holds one type specimen and over 50 exsiccata. The material was mainly
      collected by L. Fiol and M. Mus.
 
    - 
    LEB-LICH (Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de León). It contains over 5,400 sheets
      of lichens, mainly saxicolous, from the northwest of the Iberian peninsula collected by
      Arsenio Terrón.
 
    - 
    MA-LICH (Real Jardín Botánico de Madrid). It holds 12,150 sheets of lichens, among
      them 34 sheets of type material and 38 different exsiccata. Some lichen specimens were
      collected during the Royal Botanical Expeditions of the XVIII and XIX centuries to South
      America and the Philippines. These are kept inside each of the main historical Herbaria,
      but most of the others are kept in the MA-Lichen Herbaria, mainly from the Iberian
      Peninsula. They were collected in 1830, 1890-1920, 1950..., by Barras de Aragón (19
      sheets), L. Crespí (697), B. Vicioso (357), C. Cortés Latorre (349), J. Cuatrecasas
      (28), P. Merino (21). The majority of the specimens are from this decade, collected by
      active lichenologists who send their duplicates there. Information on collections is
      provided on http://www.rjb.csic.es/herbario/crypto/
      cryphola/htm
 
    - 
    MACB (Facultad de Biología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid). Started in 1968, it
      contains 5,500 sheets of lichens, mainly from Spain, Portugal, Finland, Morocco, Andorra
      and Austria. Good collections of G. Cladonia and G. Peltigera. Two sheets of
      type material. The material was mainly collected by A. R. Burgaz, R.. Carballal, I.
      Martínez, E. Seriñá and F. J. Sarrión. Collection information is provided on http://www.ucm.es/info/vegetal
 
    - 
    MAF-LICH (Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad Complutense de Madrid). It keeps 5,732
      sheets of lichens and some type material, mainly collected by L. Balaguer, A. Crespo, E.
      Barreno, L.G. Sancho, A.G. Bueno, V.J. Rico, F. Valladares and others. The eldest is the
      Blas Lázaro Ibizas lichen collection, with over 1,000 sheets, which served to
      elaborate the exhaustive Compendio de la Flora Española (1906-1920). Most of the
      others are from the Iberian Peninsula and the Canary Islands. Many samples are from the
      Antartida (still unnumbered) and Follmans and Vezdas exsiccata. Good
      representations of G. Umbilicaria and G. Parmelia.
 
    - 
    MGC (Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Málaga). Contains over 500 sheets
      elaborated in the eighties with specimens collected in Abies pinsapo forests from
      SW Spain. Collection information is provided on http://www.uma.es/Estudios/Departamentos/BiolVeg/00Indice.html
 
    - 
    MUB (Facultad de Biología, Universidad de Murcia). Holds 8,000 sheets of lichens
      from the Iberian peninsula, north and southwest Africa, central Chile and south U.S.A.
      Well represented Arthoniales and Lichinales, including type material. The
      material was mainly collected by J.M. Egea, P.P. Moreno and P. Torrente.
 
    - 
    SALA-LICH (Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad de Salamanca). Started in
      1980, it keeps over 2,500 sheets of lichens mainly epiphytes and lichenicolous fungi, from
      the western Iberian peninsula, Portugal, Argentina and Switzerland collected by Bernarda
      Marcos.
 
    - 
    SANT-LICH (Facultade de Bioloxía, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela). Started
      in 1982, it contains 9,500 sheets of lichens from the northwest of the Iberian peninsula,
      Austria and Morocco. There is a good representation of Atlantic and Mediterranean-Atlantic
      flora. The material was mainly collected by L. Bahillo, R. Carballal, A. García, M.E.
      López de Silanes, G. Paz, C. Pérez and M. J. Sánchez-Biezma.
 
    - 
    SEVB (Facultad de Biología, Sevilla). Keeps a small historical collection of
      Boutelou and F. Barras de Aragón (Silvestre & García-Rowe 1982).
 
    - 
    SEVF (Facultad de Farmacia, Sevilla). Contains over 6,700 sheets of lichens,
      saxicolous and epiphytes, from the Iberian peninsula, north Africa and Australia mainly
      collected by Jorge García-Rowe. 
 
    - 
    TFC-LICH (Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife). Holds 2,341
      sheets of epiphytes and saxicolous lichens, mainly from all the Canary Islands including
      small islands like La Graciosa, Montaña Clara and Alegranza. It also holds sheets from
      Austria, Germany, Switzerland, south Chile and Venezuela. It keeps one holotype. Good
      representation of G. Ramalina, G. Roccella and Stictaceae. The
      material was mainly collected by C. Hernández and L. Sánchez.
 
    - 
    TFMC (Museo de la Naturaleza y el Hombre, Santa Cruz de Tenerife). Keeps 6,797
      sheets, mostly from the Canary Islands and other Macaronesian areas (Azores, Madeira,
      Salvajes and Cabo Verde), and also from the Galapagos Islands, Venezuela and Chile. It
      holds 15 isotypes. Good representation of G. Ramalina, G. Roccella and Stictaceae.
 
    - 
    VAB-LICH (Facultat de Ciències Biològiques, Universitat de València). Contains
      over 10,000 sheets of lichens and lichenicolous fungi. Among them the Beltrán collection
      with over 300 sheets, collected during 1907-1935, from Spain and Europe exchanged in
      several exsiccata. The main collection is from Spain, other parts of Europe and North
      America (California). G. Parmelia, G. Physcia s.l. and G. Xanthoria
      specimens are very abundant. The material was mainly collected by V. Atienza, E. Barreno,
      V. Calatayud and S. Fos.
 
   
    
  PRIVATE COLLECTIONS AND OTHER INSTITUTIONS 
  
    - 
    Colegio Nuestra Señora del Recuerdo (Plaza Duques de Pastrana 5, E-28036 Madrid)
      contains the herbarium of Longinos Navás (1858-1938) with 390 sheets of lichens (Rowe
      & Espinosa-Roji 1996).
 
    - 
    Instituto Nacional de Bachillerato "Práxedes Mateo Sagasta" (Logroño)
      keeps the 87 sheet lichen collection of Ildefonso Zubía (1819-1891). (Etayo 1996).
 
    - 
    RCAXII (Real Colegio Alfonso XII, San Lorenzo del Escorial, Madrid) keeps over 200
      sheets of lichens from Europe including the collections of Graells (27 sheets), Lange
      (95), Persoon (38) and others.
 
    - 
    Rosario Arroyo, personal herbarium, with over 4,000 sheets of G. Ramalina.
      Presently in the Facultad de Biología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid.
 
    - 
    Etayo (Javier Etayo, Navarro Villoslada 16, E-31003 Pamplona) One of the most
      important collections of lichens in Spain. It contains over 16,000 sheets of epiphytic
      lichens and lichenicolous fungi. It started in 1985 from the Macaronesian Islands, France,
      Mexico and Panama collections.
 
    - 
    Seoane (López Seoane Family, Casa Grande, Cabans, A Coruña). Victor López Seoane
      (1834-1900) was a Spanish encyclopedist with interest in Natural History. His heirs
      presently hold a lichen collection of 54 sheets collected by him and 59 collected by the
      Finn Ragnar Hult (1857-1899) who visited Spain in April 1899. (Carballal & col.
      1991). 
 
    - 
    Isabel Martínez Moreno, personal herbarium, with over 3,000 sheets of lichenicolous
      fungi and lichens. Currently held in Facultad de Biología, Universidad Complutense
      de Madrid.
 
    - 
    Victor J. Rico, personal herbarium, with over 5,000 sheets, with saxicolous lichens
      mainly from the "Sistema Central" mountains. Currently held in Facultad de
      Farmacia, Universidad Complutense de Madrid.
 
   
    
  REFERENCES 
  
    Amo y Mora, M. (1870) Flora cryptogámica de la Península
    Ibérica. Granada. 
    Bellot, F. (1967) Una época en la Botánica española
    (1871-1936). Discurso leido en la sesión del 23 de noviembre para su ingreso como
    Académico de número. Instututo de España. Real Academia de Farmacia. Madrid.:11-61. 
    Carballal, R.; Fraga, X.A.; García A. & Reinoso J. (1991) A
    colección de musgos, hepáticas e liques de López Seoane e Hult. Pub. Area Ciencias
    Biolóxicas, Seminario Estudos Galegos. Ediciós do Castro. A Coruña. 
    Colmeiro, M. (1856) La botánica y los botánicos de la península
    Hispano-Lusitana. Madrid. 
    Crespo, A. (1973) Composición florística de la costra liquénica del Herniario
    teucrietum pumili en la provincia de Madrid. Anales Inst. Bot. Cavanilles
    30:57-68. 
    Etayo, J. (1996) Líquenes en el herbario de Ildefonso
    Zubía(1819-1891). Acta Bot. Malacitana 21: 270-274. 
    Lázaro Ibiza, B. (1906-1920) Compendio de la Flora Española.
    Madrid.  
    Llimona, X. (1968) Visio general dels líquens de Catalunya. Treb.
    Soc. Cat. Biol. 26: 59-65. 
    Llimona, X. (1974) Las comunidades de líquenes de los yesos de
    España. Resumen Tesis Doctoral. Secret. Pub. 1-18. Universidad de Barcelona. 
    Llimona, X. (1979) Roger-Guy Werner. Collect. Bot. (Barcelona)
    11: 475-504.  
    Llimona, X. (1991) Història natural dels Països Catalans, vol 5.
    Fongs i liquens. Fundació Enciclopèdia Catalana. Barcelona. 
    Rico, V. J. & González-Bueno, A. (1990) Los líquenes del herbario
    M. Amo y Mora (1809-1894). Acta Bot. Malacitana 15: 341-343. 
    Rowe, J. G. & Espinosa-Roji, F. (1996) Enumeración de los
    líquenes del herbario de Longinos Navás S. J. Lagascalia 18(2): 125-150. 
    Sancho, L. G. (1995) Situación actual de los herbarios de líquenes
    españoles. Clementeana 2: 2-3. 
    Silvestre, S. & García-Rowe, J. (1982) Líquenes en los herbarios
    Boutelou, de la Universidad y del antiguo Museo de Historia Natural de Sevilla. Collect.
    Bot. (Barcelona) 13: 375-380. 
   
  Ana Rosa Burgaz is a professor at the Departamento de Biología Vegetal
  I de la Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid. 
    
   
  LICHEN
  NEWS 
    
  THE MED-CHECKLIST OF MEDITERRANEAN LICHENS:  
  REPORT FROM THE OPTIMA COMMISSION FOR LICHENS 
  by P. L. NIMIS 
  The OPTIMA Commission for Lichens met in
  Paris, at the Museum National d Histoire Naturelle, on May 9, 1998. Eight members
  were present: P.L. Nimis (chairman), E. Barreno, A. Crespo, J.M. Egea, M. Grube, V. John,
  X. Llimona and M.R.D. Seaward (meeting secretary). After a brief welcome by J.M. Iriondo,
  Secretary General of OPTIMA, Nimis outlined the past and present situation regarding the
  publication of checklists for the c. 60 operational geographic units (countries and their
  subdivisions) currently identified as constituting the Mediterranean study area.  
  The initiative aiming at a compilation of an inventory of Mediterranean
  lichens was started in 1989 by the OPTIMA Commission for Lichens (Nimis 1996). The
  catalogue of Italian lichens was the initial contribution (Nimis 1993), followed by
  checklists for several other Mediterranean or Southern European regions: Israel (Galun
  & Mukhtar 1996), Macaronesia (Hafellner 1995), Morocco (Egea 1996), Tunisia (Seaward
  1996), Turkey (John 1996) and the Ukraine (Kondratyuk et al. 1996). Further checklists
  will be published by the end of 1998: Cyprus (by Litterky & Mayrhofer), Portugal
  (Carvalho), and the Iberian Peninsula (Hladun & Llimona), and others are in
  preparation for Crete (resp.: M. Grube et al.), Croatia (resp: S. Ozimec, Osijek),
  Montenegro-Serbia (resp: S. Savic, Beograd), Slovenia (Suppan et al. 1998), Algeria
  (resp.: J.M. Egea, Murcia), Syria (resp.: V. John, Bad Durkheim), and Albania (resp. J.
  Hafellner, Graz and M. Tretiach, Trieste). The currently available checklists vary greatly
  in the number of species. Italy, with c. 2,300 infrageneric taxa, is the country with the
  highest number, followed by the Iberian Peninsula with c. 1,900 species. The total number
  of species in the Mediterranean region at large is still hard to estimate, but, including
  lichenicolous fungi, it will certainly exceed 3,000 taxa. Available data from other large
  regions such as Australia (2,494 species, Grgurinovic 1994), the North American continent
  excluding Mexico (3,799 species, Esslinger & Egan 1995), and Scandinavia (Norway and
  Sweden: 2,602 species, Santesson 1993) may be compared with this number. 
  To date, six checklists have been published both in paper form and on
  the internet (Israel, Italy, Morocco, Tunisia, Turkey, the Ukraine). The checklist of
  Slovenia was provided on the internet only. The checklist of Macaronesia was published in
  paper form only. Two were in an advanced stage of preparation (Iberia and Cyprus), and
  four were in preparation (Algeria, Greece, Portugal and Serbia). Among the remaining
  countries, Albania and Egypt might possibly be prepared, whereas, S France, Libya, and
  Lebanon were doubtful or difficult.  
    
  LICHEN BIODIVERSITY INFORMATION ON-LINE 
  After the introduction by Nimis, consideration was then given to a more
  consistent format for gathering and publishing checklists. A presentation was given by
  Martin Grube (Graz) on the content of the lichen OPTIMA internet site, based on the
  database at Graz and using the Italian lichen flora as a model, its potential application,
  and methods for updating. Several checklists were linked and are now collectively
  searchable, providing a first nucleus of a general checklist of Mediterranean lichens. Of
  particular importance was the production of a Thesaurus of synonyms, accessible via
  internet, which facilitates the linking of several checklists, even when they follow
  different nomenclatural standards. Thought was given to updating published checklists.
  Guidelines for the presentation of all OPTIMA data were considered, particularly in terms
  of supplementary information (biogeography, habitat, etc.), definition, editorial
  standards and abbreviations. Authors of checklists were encouraged to update them also by
  increasing the number of geographic subdivisions, when feasible. 
  An information system for the Mediterranean checklists was created on
  the internet (Grube & Nimis 1997) to provide quick access to the available information
  and to enable the automatic creation of a Med-checklist. Existing checklists are already
  available on the Web as plain text files, which may be searched or printed. Information on
  individual countries can be accessed via a 'master' page (http://bkfug.kfunigraz.
  ac.at/~grubem/medlich.htmlx). Large checklists, such as that of Italy, are
  segmented into several parts for quicker access. The pages on individual countries contain
  links to literature references and to an entry form for short additions or comments. The
  e-mail addresses of individual contributors are included with each contribution, so that
  these pages may serve as a kind of small discussion forum. Direct changes in the checklist
  files are not possible. The checklist author has to filter the newly-added information, or
  contact the contributors for further details. Large amounts of data cannot be processed by
  the entry forms, and should be sent directly to the checklist authors. 
  Access to the data was made more flexible by reformatting the
  checklists into relational databases. For this purpose we are using the database system
  Oracle 7.3. Lichenological information for five countries is already in a databased
  format: Israel, Italy, Morocco, Slovenia, and Turkey, and can be accessed directly via the
  World Wide Web. Thus, a link to the database query form is included in the
  country-specific page. At the moment, information about the geographic distribution of a
  taxon in the countries can be retrieved and, when available, data on synonymy, ecological
  parameters and other remarks can also be retrieved. In the query page for Italy,
  checklists for administrative regions can be extracted from the database as well. For the
  Italy pages, a simple Java program was included to plot the geographic distribution of a
  taxon. The program, which will be later extended to all OGUs involved in the project, is
  invoked on the client-side and can also support more sophisticated mapping of biodiversity
  information. 
  Taxonomic concepts in these five floristic tables are not homogeneous.
  For example, the extreme generic splitting of Parmelia s.lat. was deliberately not
  accepted in the checklist of Italy (Nimis 1993), while it is accepted in the checklist of
  Turkey (John 1996). This could make it somewhat difficult to directly extract data from
  the database for the automatic generation of a joint checklist. To circumvent problems
  caused by taxonomic inconsistencies, a thesaurus of synonyms, which is continuously
  updated, was introduced. This is a simple table which contains information on synonymy by
  associating synonyms with accepted names. All names are linked to a reference. Basically,
  this is an implementation of the "potential taxon" concept proposed by
  Berendsohn (1995, 1997). For practical reasons, the names accepted in the tables will be
  those accepted in the checklist of Italy, which is the richest, and is continuously
  updated as far as nomenclatural matters are concerned. The thesaurus table is
  automatically invoked to look up the accepted name whenever a name entered by the client
  is not found. The thesaurus, however, will also permit the user to choose the taxonomic
  concept to be applied in his own output. Considering the fact that in modern lichen
  taxonomy general agreement is still wanting, especially for generic delimitations, the use
  of the "potential taxon" concept appears to be the most practical and flexible
  option. The thesaurus is a useful tool in standardizing the information, and it will be
  the place where taxonomic changes will be introduced. Whenever an entry is changed in the
  thesaurus, so-called triggers will automatically alter the information in other relevant
  entries in the floristic tables, or in the thesaurus itself. 
    
  STANDARDIZING FURTHER INFORMATION 
  Some non-geographic nor taxonomical information is already available in
  the existing databases (e.g. the ecological indicator values of V. Wirth). A major effort,
  however, has been made for standardizing further non- strictly geographical information
  for the entire checklist of Italy. For every infrageneric taxon, seven additional fields
  are now available in a database format:  
  1: Growth-form: a) non-lichenized fungus, b) lichenicolous
  fungus, c) crustose, d) crustose endolithic, e) crustose placodiomorph, e) foliose, f)
  foliose umbilicate, g) fruticose, h) fruticose filamentous, g) squamulose. This system is
  still provisional, and rather rough: work is in progress for developing a new system of
  morpho-functional categories, more sensitive to ecological variation. 
  2) Photobiont: a) Ch (all green algae other than Trentepohlia),
  b) Trentepohlia, c) filamentous cyanobacteria, d) coccale cyanobacteria 
  3) Reproductive strategy: a) mainly sexual, b) mainly by soredia
  and soredia-like structures, c) mainly by isidia and isidia-like structures, d) mainly by
  thallus fragmentation.  
  4) Substrata: a) siliceous rocks in general, b) base-rich
  siliceous rocks, c) metal-rich siliceous rocks, d) calciferous rocks, e)
  terricolous-muscicolous in general, f) as before, on calciferous ground, g) as before, on
  acid substrata, h) epiphytic, i) epiphytic with optimum on base-rich bark, l) foliicolous,
  m) lignicolous. 
  5) Altitudinal range: for each species the occurrence in one or
  more of the following vegetational belts is given: 1) evergreen Mediterranean belt, 2)
  deciduous oak belt (submediterranean), 3) Fagus-belt (Mediterranean-montane and
  Northern Temperate), 4) Coniferous, boreal belt of the Alps and N Apennines, 5) Above
  treeline (both the Alpine and Oromediterranean belts).  
  6) Coastal-maritime flora: this field allows the selection of
  those lichens which are almost exclusively found along the coast, near the sea, without
  distinguishing between strictly maritime and coastal species at large.  
  7) Oceanicity-continentality: a) suboceanic species, with a
  mainly western distribution in Eurasia, and bound to mild-humid climatic conditions, b)
  true oceanic species, c) subcontinental species.  
  A further field concerns the rarity/commonness of a species. This
  information has been organized into eight categories: 1) extremely common, 2) very common,
  3) common, 4) rather common, 5) rather rare, 6) rare, 7) very rare, 8) extremely rare. The
  assignment of a species to a given category was based on the number of specimens present
  in the Lichen Herbarium of the University of Trieste (TSB) which contains more than 30,000
  samples, most of which were collected in Italy in the last 15 years. The herbarium is
  fully computerized, and can be searched on the Internet (http://www.univ.trieste.it/~biologia/leggi.html).
  The largest part of the specimens from Italy were gathered during many floristic surveys
  carried out throughout Italy, visiting hundreds of localities. All species found in each
  locality - including trivial and common ones - were collected and stored in the herbarium.
  For this reason, the number of specimens found in TSB can be considered a good estimate of
  the rareness-commonness of a species. The estimates were carried out considering the total
  number of samples present in each altitudinal belt (e.g. a species found above treeline is
  - of course - considered as common only within this altitudinal range). For two
  categories: "extremely common" and "extremely rare" some additional
  criteria were used. The "extremely common" marker has been applied only to
  species which are very common at least in two altitudinal belts, and throughout the
  country (e.g. Physcia adscendens). The "extremely rare" marker has been
  applied to all species which are very rare, and which fulfill two further requirements: 1)
  they have not been described recently, 2) they do not belong to critical or very
  poorly-known taxonomic groups. In this way, the list of "extremely rare" lichens
  practically corresponds to a red-list of lichens from Italy. This solution is much more
  realistic than the rigid application of the IUCN criteria, which are difficult to use in a
  country in which lichenological research stopped almost completely for almost a century,
  and revived again only a few decades ago. 
  By the end of 1998, further ecological parameters will be added. Such
  data permit much more complex queries. For example, someone interested in endolithic
  lichens occurring on the Temples of Agrigento could ask for the list of endolithic
  calcicolous species occurring in the Mediterranean belt of Sicily; people carrying out a
  biomonitoring study using epiphytic lichens near Vicenza could rapidly obtain a list of
  epiphytic species occurring in the submediterranean belt of Veneto; material for lichens
  and forest continuity in the montane belt of the Gran Sasso National Park could be
  obtained from, e.g. a list of epiphytic macrolichens with a suboceanic distribution
  occurring in the beech belt of Abruzzo. More complex cross-queries will provide a
  consistent base of data for biogeographical comparisons, on the line of that provided for
  the whole of Italy by Nimis & Tretiach (1995): an example concerning two regions of
  Italy (Trentino-Südtirol and Calabria) is in preparation by M. Grube, including a
  comparison of altitudinal profiles in the two regions in terms of number of species,
  growth-forms, reproductive strategies, types of photobiont, substrata, incidence of
  oceanic vs. continental lichens, etc. 
    
  CONCLUSIONS 
  The progress of national checklist projects directly stems from the
  activities of the OPTIMA Commission for Lichens. Their coordination is supported by the
  on-line representation of the available data, and databased biodiversity information
  offers individual authors a consistent "added value" to their data, provided by
  the links to many different data sources. Considering the increasing speed in the
  accomplishment of the project witnessed during the last few years, the authors are
  optimistic about presenting a fully computerized general checklist for all hitherto
  investigated countries in a very near future. For well-investigated OGUs, it will be
  possible to more rigorously quantify floristic similarities among climatically similar,
  but geographically distant areas. To date, phytogeographical evaluations are only possible
  within Italy, which is the most thoroughly investigated country. However, international
  co-ordination and the database approach provided by the OPTIMA Commission for Lichens will
  soon permit the inclusion of several other countries in quantitative studies of lichen
  phytogeography in the Mediterranean region.  
  Once the questions of standardization are solved, it will be most
  interesting to additionally incorporate databased herbarium information. This could have a
  great impact on environmental studies. When properly analysed, information from historic
  collections can be an invaluable tool for documenting changes in climate and biodiversity
  (Shaffer et al. 1998). During the Paris meeting, Seaward proposed to establish an
  inventory of herbaria holdings of Mediterranean material, the information being derived by
  Internet via IAL. Nimis proposed to achieve this goal through BioCISE (Biological
  Collection Information Service in Europe - Resource Identification), a
  multidisciplinary Concerted Action project funded by the European Commission (DG XII),
  whose aim is to identify and analyse databases of biological collection objects in Europe.
  The results of the BioCISE survey will be made public on the World Wide Web and will serve
  to formulate a proposal for the creation of a European Biological Collection Information
  Service. All curators of Herbaria containing Mediterranean lichens are warmly invited by
  the Commission to respond to the BioCISE questionnaire (http://www.bgbm.fu-berlin.de/biocise/
  TheProject/Survey/).  
  Continuous on-line interaction among different centres is now possible.
  This leads to the "publication" of a product that is updated on-line by a
  continuous stream of new information, filtered by the responsible person(s) for a given
  checklist. This is exactly what is needed for biodiversity inventories. Although
  checklists have been and will continue to be published in the traditional form, their
  continuous updating on the Web provides the possibility of a new type of
  "publication", one that would have not been possible in the past and that is
  particularly adapted for open-ended works such as gene-banks and biodiversity inventories.
  The creation of a working space on the Internet for the lichen Med-checklist project has
  two advantages: (a) facilitating the exchange of information among specialists from
  different countries, (b) making immediately available to the scientific community the most
  up-to-date information on lichen biodiversity in southern Europe and the Mediterranean
  region.  
  Finally, Nimis raised the question of finance; to date, $ 23,000 had
  been committed from his own research budget, for which many participants were most
  grateful, but alternative sources should be sought, both by individuals and collectively.
  In spite of the restricted budget, however, the project is proceeding well, and perhaps
  even faster than originally expected. 
    
  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 
  All members of the OPTIMA Commission for Lichens are acknowledged for
  discussions and suggestions. I am particularly grateful to M.R.D. Seaward (Bradford) and
  M. Grube (Graz) who kindly provided material and information for this text. 
    
  REFERENCES 
  
    Berendsohn, W.G. 1995: The concept of "potential taxa" in
    databases. Taxon 44: 207-212. 
    Berendson, W.G. 1997: A taxonomic information model for botanical
    databases: the IOPI model. Taxon 46: 283-309. 
    Crovello, T.J. 1981: Quantitative biogeography: an overview. Taxon 30:
    563-575. 
    Egea, J.M. 1996: Catalogue of lichenized and lichenicolous fungi of
    Morocco. Bocconea 6: 19-114. 
    Esslinger, T.C. & Egan, R.S. 1995: A sixth checklist of the
    lichen-forming, lichenicolous, and allied fungi of the continental United States and
    Canada. The Bryologist 98: 467-549.  
    Galun, M. & Mukhtar, A. 1996: Checklist of the lichens of Israel.
    Bocconea 6: 149-171. 
    Grgurinovic, C. (ed.) 1994: Flora of Australia, vol. 55, Lichens.
    Lecanorales 2, Parmeliaceae. - Australian Biol. Res. Study, Canberra.  
    Grube M. & Nimis P.L. 1997: Mediterranean lichens on-line. Taxon 46:
    487-493. 
    Hafellner, J. 1995: A new checklist of lichens and lichenicolous fungi
    of insular Laurimacaronesia including a lichenological bibliography for the area.
    Fritschiana 5: 1-132. 
    John, V. 1996 Preliminary catalogue of lichenized and lichicolous fungi
    of Mediterranean Turkey. Bocconea 6: 173-216. 
    Kondratyuk, S., Navrotskaya, I., Khodosovtsev, A. & Solonina, O.
    1996: Checklist of Ukrainian lichens. Bocconea 6: 217-294. 
    Nimis, P.L. 1993: The lichens of Italy. An annotated catalogue. Museo
    Regionale di Scienze Naturali. Torino. Monogr. 12: 1-897. 
    Nimis, P.L. 1996: Towards a checklist of Mediterranean lichens.
    Bocconea 6: 5-17. 
    Nimis, P.L. & Tretiach M., 1995: The lichens of Italy, a
    phytoclimatical outline. Crypt. Bot. 5: 199-208. 
    Santesson, R. 1993: The lichens and lichenicolous fungi of Sweden and
    Norway. STB Förlaget, Lund, 240 pp. 
    Seaward, M.R.D. 1996: Checklist of Tunisian lichens. Bocconea 6:
    115-148. 
    Shaffer, H.B., Fisher R.N. & Davidson C. 1998: The role of natural
    history collections in documenting species declines. Tree 13: 27-30. 
    Suppan, U., Prügger, J., Mayrhofer, H., Grube, M. & Batic, F.
    1998. Towards a check-list of Slovenian lichens. Sauteria (in press). 
   
    
   
  WEB
  NEWS 
    
  DIRECTORY FOR MEDICINAL PLANT CONSERVATION 
  The IUCN Species Survival Commission informed, on behalf of Uwe
  Schippmann Co-Chair IUCN Medicinal Plants Specialist Group, that the Directory for
  Medicinal Plant Conservation is now available on the Internet as a searchable database,
  with support of the Zentralstelle für Agrardokumentation und information (ZADI). The
  directory can be found at http://www.dainet.de/genres/mpc-dir.
   
  The directory characterizes 139 medicinal plant projects and
  institutions, based in more than 80 countries worldwide, with information on their status,
  objectives, activities, geographic interest, databases, publications, funding resources,
  and contact address.  
  The hardcopy version of the Directory of Medicinal Plants Conservation
  by M. Kasparek, A. Gröger & U. Schippmann can be ordered at: BfN-Schriften-vertrieb
  im Landwirtschaftsverlag, Postfach 480249, D-48079 Münster, Germany, Fax: (49) 2501 801
  204 (price 19,80 DM plus postage). 
  The database does not contain information on projects of strictly
  Mediterranean scope. However, several projects or institutions from many Mediterranean
  countries are cited, their geographical reach ranging from local to the whole of Europe.
  Amendments and corrections to its contents are highly appreciated by the authors. 
    
   
  PERSONALIA  
    
  OPTIMA MEDALS 
  OPTIMA GOLD MEDAL 
  Prof. Werner Greuter, founder of OPTIMA and current President of
  the Organization, was awarded the OPTIMA Gold Medal at the IX OPTIMA Meeting held in Paris
  in May 1998. This medal is awarded every three years to a botanist who, by his or her
  activity, is considered to have made an outstanding contribution to the phytotaxonomy of
  the Mediterranean area. The text of the address delivered upon presentation of the award
  is reproduced below. 
    
  "Monsieur le Président, chers Collègues,  
  Il y a des hommes qui ont une telle volonté dagir dans le sens
  de lévolution de la communauté dont ils sont membres, que leur action positive
  finit par les identifier à la structure même dont ils sont la cheville ouvrière. 
  Au sein de notre organisation un tel homme existe. Werner Greuter non
  seulement fut linstigateur , mais le fondateur et lame dOPTIMA, dont il
  fut le secrétaire jusquen 1995, date de son élection à la Présidence. 
  Rendre hommage à Werner Greuter, ce nest pas seulement évoquer
  ses mérites scientifiques, bien connus par les botanistes , mais cest aussi penser
  à lhomme. 
  Fils dun médecin de nationalité Suisse qui avait la direction
  dun hopital à Genes et étudiait la flore de la Sardaigne, jeune homme Werner
  Greuter nosait pas lui aussi "herboriser". 
  Aujourdhui il est: 
  
    - Directeur général du Jardin botanique et du Muséum botanique de Berlin-Dahlem;
 
    - Professeur Fachbereich Biologie de la Libre Université de Berlin,
 
    - Secrétaire de lAssociation Internationale pour la Taxinomie des plantes (IAPT);
 
    - Rapporteur général pour la nomenclature botanique,
 
    - Editeur de Regnum Vegetale;
 
    - Co-éditeur de Taxon, de Flora Mediterranea et de Boccanea;
 
    - Membre dune vingtaine de Comités internationaux et de 25 Sociétés
      scientifiques;
 
    - Auteur de plus dune centaine de publications, monographies ou articles
      scientifiques;
 
   
  Aujourdhui cest lami et léternel chercheur que
  nous souhaitons honorer. 
  Tout au long de sa carrière il na jamais cessé de stimuler les
  jeunes botanistes en suivant leurs travaux avec beaucoup de sévérité parfois ,pour
  continuer la route dune rigoureuse coopération scientifique internationnale
  partagée. 
  Son apport à lenrichissement de la culture scientifique est
  fondamental. Il a était linstigateur et le fondateur de nombreuses sociétés
  scientifiques quil continue à animer. Ses monographies et articles ont souvent
  résolu toute une série de problèmes dordre systématique, taxinomique et
  phytogéographique notament en ce qui concerne la flore de la Méditerranée. Nous pouvons
  en particulier rappeler sa contribution à la connaissance de la flore et de la
  Biogéographie de la Crète et son travail sur la taxinomie des Caryophyllaceae et Compositae.
  En ce qui concerne la dernière famille il faut citer sa très belle monographie sur le
  genre Ptylostemon . 
  Le role du Prof. Greuter fut également fondamental pour permettre la
  poursuite d une continuitè de la nomenclature botanique, au Congrés international
  de Saint Petersbourg. 
  Aujourdhui son effort porte sur une unification des Codes
  biologiques et une standardisation de la nomenclature. 
  En ce qui concerne son travail sur la flore de la Méditerranée nous
  souhaitons que très rapidement soit publié Med-checklist . 
    
  Cest à lunanimitè que la Commision des Prix dOPTIMA
  a décidé que lui soit attribué la Médaille dor, et quelle lui adresse tous
  ses souhaits de longue continuation et espère en son soutien et en son action au sein
  dOPTIMA et pour la Botanique. 
  Cest pour moi un très grand honneur, mais aussi une grande joie
  dadresser au Prof. Greuter les félicitations de tous les membres
  dOPTIMA." 
  F. M. RAIMONDO 
    
  OPTIMA SILVER MEDALS 
  The OPTIMA Silver Medal is awarded every three years to the authors of
  the best papers or books on the phytotaxonomy of the Mediterranean area that were
  published in the preceding three-year period. At the IX OPTIMA Meeting held in Paris in
  May 1998, the following botanists received this medal: T.H.M. Mes for his Doctoral
  Thesis "Origin and evolution of the Macaronesian Sempervivoideae (Crassulaceae)."
  (Utrecht, 1995); Z. Díaz-Lifante and B. Valdés for "Revisión del género Asphodelus
  L. (Asphodelaceae) en el Mediterraneo occidental." (Boissiera 52,1996);
  and, M. Raffaelli and L. Baldoin for "Il complesso di Biscutella laevigata
  L. (Cruciferae) in Italia." (Webbia 52(1):87-128,1997). 
  The text of the addresses delivered upon presentation of the medals for
  1996 and 1997 is reproduced below. The text corresponding to the medal for 1995 was not
  available at the closing of this edition. 
    
  "Report on the attribution of an OPTIMA Silver Medal to Z.
  Díaz-Lifante and M. Raffaelli (Universidad de Sevilla) for their paper "Revisión
  del género Asphodelus L. (Asphodelaceae) en el Mediterraneo
  occidental" (Boissiera 52, 1996): 
  This is an excellent taxonomic revision of the genus Asphodelus
  in W. Mediterranean (plus Macaronesia). In fact, it covers the whole genus, as all species
  are represented in W. Mediterranean and it is the area where the centre of evolution of
  this genus is found. 
  It is based on direct observations of almost 800 natural populations
  from Morocco, Portugal, Spain, France and Italy as well as about 3,800 herbarium sheets
  from 42 herbaria. 
  The authors are so modest that they presented us a taxonomic revision,
  but it has indeed the value of a monograph, since either both authors or Dr. Díaz-Lifante
  alone have published a series of papers on the genus whose results are incorporated in
  this revision and used to make taxonomic decisions. 
  Palinological characters have proved to be very useful in separating
  sections and karyological differences have often been essential in recognizing
  infraspecific categories.  
  After a short history of this genus, there is a long chapter on the
  taxonomic value of morphological, biological, palinological and karyological characters. 
  For each species, the correct name and synonyms together with
  typification, description, indication of chromosome numbers, distribution and ecology, and
  a series of important comments dealing with nomenclature, typification, variability and
  infraspecific taxa are given. 
  A detailed list of herbarium material studied, together with dot
  distribution maps and a full page illustration for each recognized taxa are added. 
  Five natural sections with a total of 19 taxa are distinguished, three
  subspecies as new to science are described and six new combinations are established. 
  A chapter on natural hybrids and a short evolutionary synthesis close
  this revision. 
  I would like to stress again the number of wild populations studied:
  about 800 all over W. Mediterranean. Also the study including biological and reproductive
  aspects has taken six years. 
  With great pleasure, I would like to congratulate the authors with this
  merited prize." 
  E. GRABIELIAN 
    
  "Rapport pour l'attribution d'une médaille d'argent de l'OPTIMA
  à Mauro Raffaelli & Lucilla Baldoin (Université de Florence) pour leur travail
  "Il complesso di Biscutella laevigata L. (Cruciferae) in Italia" (Webbia
  52(1):87-128, 1997): 
  Le travail que je vous présente est une excellente révision pour
  l'Italie de ce groupe polymorphe que constitue le complexe de Biscutella laevigata.
  Il révèle à quel point l'application méthodique à des groupes difficiles des
  méthodes et des techniques les plus classiques de la taxinomie végétale reste
  d'actualité. 
  Ce travail fait en effet largement appel à la morphologie
  macroscopique et microscopique (MEB) des organes végétatifs et reproducteurs, exploitant
  avec intelligence et bonheur les riches herbiers italiens, notamment celui de Florence. Le
  regroupement d'échantillons de récoltes différentes opérées dans des localités
  voisines a ainsi permis aux auteurs de reconstituer ce qu'ils appellent des
  "populations artificielles" d'exsiccata qui leur ont révélé les caractères
  soumis à variation géographique. 
  Le principal résultat scientifique est cependant fondé sur l'étude
  caryologique, qui a mis en évidence l'existence jusqu'ici passée inaperçue de
  populations diploïdes (2n=18) dans les Préalpes de Vicenza et les Monts Lessini
  (Vénétie). Isolées reproductivement de toutes les autres populations qui sont
  tétraploïdes, ces populations constituent une espèce nouvelle pour la science, B. prealpina,
  bien caractérisée morphologiquement entre autres par ses scapes torsadés en hélice. 
  L'étude analytique fine de la variation géographique des dimensions,
  de la forme et de la pilosité des feuilles, des pétales et des siliques ainsi que de la
  phénologie de la floraison et de l'écologie conduit les auteurs à dénoncer comme
  inconsistants un certain nombre de taxons infraspécifiques préalablement décrits. Pour
  Raffaelli & Baldoin, B. laevigata est donc représentée en Italie par 5
  sous-espèces:  
  
    - la sous-espèce type, la plus largement répartie dans la péninsule, et la subsp. lucida,
      localisées à basse altitude sur les reliefs du Trentin et de Vénétie;
 
    - trois sous-espèces décrites pour la première fois 
 
    - subsp. ossolana, endémique à aire restreinte d'altitude élevée dans le
      Piedmont;
 
    - subsp. prinzerae, sur substrat ophiolitique à basse altitude des pré-Apennins
      de la région de Parme;
 
    - subsp. australis, largement répandue dans les Abruzzes à altitude moyenne.
 
    - la subsp. hispidissima (stat. nov.), localisée sur des calcaires détritiques de
      la région de Trieste à basse altitude.
 
   
  Ces résultats fondamentaux sont mis à la disposition des utilisateurs
  à l'aide d'une clé de détermination copieusement illustrée de dessins précis, qui
  permettra sans doute aux botanistes d'identifier finement et sans difficulté les Biscutella
  gr. laevigata qu'ils rencontreront en Italie.  
  Mauro Raffaelli et Lucilla Baldoin nous donnent donc avec cette
  publication le bel exemple dun travail qui satisfera à la fois les taxinomistes à
  la recherche d'informations précises sur un groupe complexe, et les chercheurs de
  terrain, floristes et écologues, qui disposeront avec cette révision d'un précieux
  outil d'identification. Ils méritent donc parfaitement lattribution de la médaille
  dargent de lOPTIMA.  
  En présentant mes chaleureuses félicitations aux auteurs, il ne me
  reste évidemment qu'à souhaiter lextension de telles recherches sur le groupe dans
  l'ensemble de son aire, puisque Med-Checklist énumére 23 espèces dans lagrégat Biscutella
  laevigata, et 9 sous-espèces de B. laevigata!... 
  J. MATHEZ  
    
    
  1997 FONDENA PRIZE 
  Last December 1997, Prof. César Gómez-Campo received the 1997
  FONDENA Prize from King Juan Carlos I of Spain. The FONDENA Prize for nature protection is
  awarded to a person, association or institution whose creative work or investigation is
  considered to represent an important contribution to fauna and/or flora conservation in
  Spain. Prof. César Gómez-Campo, is an active member of the OPTIMA Commission for
  Conservation of Plant Resources, having served as Secretary of this Commission until 1995.
  This prize recognized his pioneering work, research and initiatives in the creation of
  seedbanks for endemic and threatened plant species in Spain and throughout the
  Mediterranean. Prof. Gómez-Campo had been previously awarded with the Spanish National
  Prize in Environment. 
    
   
  MEETINGS 
    
  IX OPTIMA MEETING  PARIS (11-17 MAY
  1998) 
  The IX OPTIMA Meeting has recurrently appeared throughout this
  issue of OPTIMA Newsletter. Nevertheless, in this section a brief overview of the
  happenings and activities is provided.  
  Over 250 people from 18 countries arrived in Paris to participate at
  the Meeting. Radiant sunny weather lasted the whole week and this beautiful city was
  getting ready for the other major international event, to be held a few weeks after our
  meeting,. 
  The Meeting was held for seven intensive days and consisted of twelve
  multidisciplinary symposia. 
  On May 11th, at the Opening Session, Prof. Francesco di
  Castri gave the Opening Plenary Lecture dedicated to Mediterranean biodiversity in the
  context of a global economy. The symposia covered a wide range of subjects related to
  Mediterranean botany. Following the tradition of past meetings where special attention is
  given to the area where the meeting is held, two symposia were assigned to French
  activities in Botany. Two additional symposia were reserved for the study of specific
  groups of life forms: Taxonomy, distribution and ecology of Mediterranean Bryophytes and
  Fungal diversity in the Mediterranean area. Another two symposia were dedicated to
  the study of plant life under specific environmental conditions: Plants and serpentine
  formations in the Mediterranean and Plant life at the southern limits of the
  Mediterranean region. The advances of the current "information age" in
  Mediterranean botany was put in evidence in three symposia dedicated to Data resources
  for Mediterranean botanists: Mediterranean databases. Finally, conservation, molecular
  techniques and ethnobotany also had their share with Knowledge and conservation of
  biodiversity in Mediterranean islands, Molecular phylogenies of Mediterranean groups
  and Usage of plants in the Mediterranean region. The contents of the symposia were
  further complemented by two poster sessions on these topics.  
  At the Closing Plenary Meeting, our President, Prof. Werner Greuter was
  awarded the OPTIMA Gold Medal. Three OPTIMA Silver Medals, awarded to the authors of the
  best papers or books on the phytotaxonomy of the Mediterranean area that were published in
  the preceding three-year period, were granted to Dr. Theodorus H.M. Mes from Holland
  (1995), Dr. Zoila Díaz-Lifante and Prof. Benito Valdés from Spain (1996), and Dr.
  Lucilla Baldoin and Prof. Mauro Raffaelli from Italy (1997). 
  On the organizational front, ten OPTIMA Commissions which play an
  active role in different areas of Mediterranean botany held their meetings. A report of
  their activities was presented at the Closing Plenary Meeting.  
  In addition, the International Board approved the creation of two
  additional commissions, one dedicated to the study of Mediterranean Fungi and the other to
  the coordination with the Euro-Mediterranean Initiative in Plant Systematics. 
  The Proceedings of the IX OPTIMA Meeting will be published in Bocconea.
  A new Program Committee is already working on the organization of the next OPTIMA Meeting
  which will be held in Palermo, in 2001. 
  I wish to express my most sincere gratitude to Prof. Jacques Moret and
  to all members of the Organizing Committee for their hard work and enthusiasm in the
  enormous task of organizing this successful meeting, and for giving participants a chance
  to meet and share our experiences in the marvellous city of Paris. I also wish to thank
  the members of the OPTIMA Programme Committee for all their dedication and commitment in
  making each one of the symposia a great success. 
  J.M. Iriondo 
   
  Index 
   
  
    
     
   
  
   
  ANNOUNCEMENTS 
    
  
    19-25 July 1998 
    
   
  Conservation Biology at the Molecular Level: Identifying Management and Evolutionary
  Units - Florence, Italy. 
  A symposium to be held in association with the VII International Congress of
  Ecology-1998. 
  Contact: Dr. Tim King or Dr. R. Kent Schreiber, US Geological Survey, Leetown
  Science Center, 1700 Leetown Road, Kearneysville, West Virginia 25430, USA. E-mail: Tim_King@usgs.gov 
  · · · · ·  
  
    20-26 July 1998 
   
  3rd International Symposium on the Taxonomy of Cultivated Plants 
  Edinburgh, U.K. 
              Contact: Dr. Crinan Alexander, Royal Botanic Garden, Inverleith 
                Row, Edinburgh EH3 5LR, U.K. Tel: (44) 131 552 7171; Fax: (44) 
                131 552 0382; E-mail: c.alexander@rbge.org.uk 
  · · · · ·  
  
    10-15 August 1998 
   
  VIIth IOPB Symposium: Evolution in Man-made Habitats - Amsterdam 
  The symposium of the International Organization of Plant Biosystematists will comprise
  six non-concurrent plenary sessions and specially scheduled poster sessions. The topics
  are: 1. Evolution of disturbed habitats; 2. Evolution of crops  Domestication:
  simulating evolution; 3. Evolution of crops - Mapping of special traits; 4. Evolution of
  invasive plant species - Adaptation and life cycle; 5. Evolution of crop-wild relative
  complexes; 6. Evolution of invasive plant species - Apomixis: clonal vs. sexual
  speciation. A four-day post-symposium excursion will visit a series of dune habitats along
  the Dutch coast. 
  Contact: Dr. Hans den Nijs, ISP-Hugo de Vries Laboratory, Kruislaan 318, 1098 SM
  Amsterdam, The Netherlands. 
              Tel: (31) 20 525 7660; Fax: (31) 20 525 7662; E-mail: IOPB98@ 
                bio.uva.nl 
  · · · · ·  
  
    12-14 August 1998 
   
  Tenth Wildland Shrub Symposium  Ephraim, Utah 
  The Shrub Research consortium in concert with the Great Basin Environmental Education
  Centre is sponsoring the symposium at Snow College. The symposium theme is Shrubland
  Ecotones. There will be a mid-symposium field trip to the Great Basin Experimental Range
  and to hybrid zones in Salt Creek in the Uianta National Forest. 
              Contact: Dave Lanier, Great Basin Environmental Education Center, 
                150 East College Avenue, Ephraim, UT 84627, Tel: (1) 801 2837261; 
                E-mail:davel@storm. snow.edu 
  · · · · ·  
  
    23-28 August 1998 
   
  Sixth International Mycological Congress - Tel Aviv, Israel. 
              Contact: Congress Secretariat, P.O. Box 50006, Tel Aviv 61500, Israel. 
                Tel: (972) 35140014; Fax: (972) 35175674; E-mail: MYCOL@ Kenes.ccmail.compuserve.com; 
                http://Isb380.plbio.1su.edu/index.html 
  · · · · ·  
  
    14-18 September 1998 
   
  Fifth International Botanic Gardens Conservation Congress -Cape Town, South Africa. 
              Contact: Prof. Brian J. Huntley, National Botanical Institute, 
                Private Bag X7, Claremont, South Africa 7735. Fax: (27) 21 761 
                4687; E-mail: bgci98@nbict.nbi.ac.za. 
  · · · · ·  
  
    21-25 September 1998 
   
  XV Eucarpia General Congress "Genetics and Breeding for Crop Quality and
  Resistance" - Viterbo, Italy. 
  The XV Congress of the European Association for Research on Plant Breeding. 
              Contact: XV Eucarpia Congress-Genetics and Breeding for crop Quality 
                and Resistance, University of Tuscia, 01100 Viterbo, Italy. Fax: 
                (39) 761 357256; E-mail: eucarpia@ unitus.it Complementary information 
                at: http://www.unitus. it/confsem/eucarpia/eu.html 
  · · · · ·  
  
    28 - September 1998 
   
  Monocots II: The 2nd International Conference on the Comparative Biology of the
  Monocotyledons and 3rd International Symposium on Grass Systematics and Evolution -
  Sidney, Australia 
              Contact: Karen Wilson, Monocots II, Royal Botanic Gardens, Mrs. 
                Macquaries Road, Sidney NSW 2000, Australia. Tel: (61) 2 9231 
                8137; Fax: (61) 2 9251 7231; E-mail: karen@ rbgsyd.gov.au 
  · · · · ·  
  
    19 April  14 May 1999 
   
  International Diploma in Botanic Garden Education  Kew 
  In association with Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI). 
  Contact: Education Section, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, TW9
  3AB, UK, Tel: (44) 181 332 5623/ 5638; Fax: (44) 181 332 5610; E-mail: Courses@rbgkew.org.uk; http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/education/index.html 
  · · · · ·  
  
    7 June  30 July 1999 
   
  International Diploma in Herbarium Techniques  Kew 
  Contact: Education Section, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, TW9
  3AB, UK, Tel: (44) 181 332 5623/ 5638; Fax: (44) 181 332 5610; E-mail: Courses@rbgkew.org.uk; http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/education/index.html 
  · · · · ·  
  
    26-30 July 1999 
   
  42nd Annual Symposium of the IAVS (International Association of Vegetation
  Science  Bilbao, Spain 
  The main topic of the symposium will be vegetation and climate. 
  Contact: IAVS99, Depto. de Biología Vegetal y Ecología (Botánica), UPV/EHU
  Ap. 644, E-48080 Bilbao, Spain. Tel: (34) 94 4647700 ext. 2394; Fax: (34) 94 4648500;
  E-mail: iavs99@lg.ehu.es 
  · · · · ·  
  
    1-7 August 1999 
   
  XVI International Botanical Congress  St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A. 
  The XVI IBC Saint Louis is being organized by the whole North American botanical
  community, including botanical, mycological, and ecological societies, universities,
  botanical research institutions, and other sponsors. 
  The XVI International Botanical Congress will provide a forum for the presentation and
  discussion of the latest advances in plant sciences among botanists worldwide.  
  In the tradition of previous IBCs, the Scientific Program of the XVI IBC will consist
  of invited oral presentations in plenary lectures, keynote symposia and general symposia
  as well as contributed poster sessions. The Scientific Program will be subdivided into the
  following disciplinary areas:  
    - Botanical Diversity: Systematics and Evolution
 
    - Ecology, Environment, and Conservation
 
    - Structure, development, and cellular Biology
 
    - Genetics and Genomics
 
    - Physiology and Biochemistry
 
    - Human Uses of Plants: Economic Botany and Biotechnology
 
   
  Any person interested in plant biology is invited to attend the XVI IBC. The full
  registration fee will allow attendees admittance to all scientific sessions and
  receptions. For more detailed information you can consult the XVI IBC Web site: http://www.ibc99. org or write to Secretary general,
  XVI IBC, c/o Missouri Botanical Garden, P. O. Box 299, St. Louis, MO 63166-0299 USA; Fax:
  (1) 314-577-9589; E-mail: ibc16@mobot. org 
  · · · · ·  
  
    19 August  13 October 1999 
   
  International Diploma in Plant Conservation Techniques  Kew 
  Contact: Education Section, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, TW9
  3AB, UK, Tel: (44) 181 332 5623/ 5638; Fax: (44) 181 332 5610; E-mail: Courses@rbgkew.org.uk; http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/education/index.html 
  · · · · ·  
  
    22-25 August 1999 
   
  International Conifer Conference  Kent, U.K. 
  The conference will have worldwide geographical coverage and its main topics will
  include cultivation and propagation techniques, diversity and distribution, ecology and
  vegetation, forestry and economic uses, growth and reproduction, landscape uses,
  sustainability and species conservation and taxonomy and evolution. 
  Contact: Miss Lisa von Schlippe, The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond,
  Surrey, TW9 3AE U.K. Tel: (44) 0181 332 5198; Fax: (44) 0181 332 5197; E-mail: L.von.schlippe@ rbgkew.org.uk 
  · · · · ·  
  
    July-August 2000 
   
  Ninth International Conference on Mediterranean-Type Ecosystems (MEDECOS 2000) 
  Stellenbosch, South Africa 
              Contact: Dave Richardson, ISOMED Secretary, Instittute for Plant 
                Conservation, Botany Department, University of Cape Town, 7701 
                Rondebsoch, South Africa; E-mail: medecos@ 
                botzoo.uct.ac.za 
    
 
  
   
 
  Back to General Index 
   
 
  NOTICES OF PUBLICATIONS  
  by Werner Greuter 
  
    ((((((((((((((( 
    (((((((( 
    ((( 
   
  Notices of Publications Index 
   
 
  OPTIMA 
    
 
  
    [Jacques MORET (ed.)] - IXème Colloque d'OPTIMA. IX
      OPTIMA Meeting. Paris, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, 11-17 mai 1998. 11-17
      May 1998 [programme, abstracts, list of participants]. - OPTIMA, Paris, 1998. 58 + [100] +
      18 pages, paper with clamp back. 
     
   
  The present document was available to the participants of the IX OPTIMA
  Meeting in Paris upon registration, and consists of four parts: the last version of the
  scientific programme, on pages 5-16; the lecture abstracts, pp. 17-58; the poster
  abstracts on 100 unnumbered pages; and the address list of participants on a second run of
  18 numbered pages. 
  Although last-minute printing ensured that this volume is a good match of conference
  reality, inevitably some changes in participation and programme were unpredictable and are
  not reflected. Yet, the recorded participation (250 addresses from 21 countries) is fairly
  accurate. One striking feature of the Meeting, not surprisingly, is the unprecedented
  attendance from North African countries, all of which except Libya were represented. 
  There were 12 half-day symposia with lectures and 11 thematic groups of posters.
  Lecture abstracts are 40 in number, including the 3-pages version of Francesco Di Castri's
  opening plenary lecture; they are followed by 91 abstracts of poster presentations. Half a
  dozen additional abstracts were available as loose handouts at the Meeting and are not
  accounted for here. Even so, the number of posters was only about two-thirds of those
  shown at the two previous Meetings - the main reason, obviously, being the early date in
  the midst of the summer term of European universities. 
  The full proceedings will be published as a volume of Bocconea, which registered
  participants are entitled to receive for free. Other interested persons may place a
  subscription order in writing to the Herbarium Mediterraneum in Palermo. W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Cryptogams 
    
 
  
    Ruprecht DUELL (ed.) - Moose Griechenlands. Bryophytes
      of Greece, with collaboration of Barbara DÜLL-WUNDER. [Bryologische Beiträge, 10.] -
      Duell-Hermanns, Bad Münstereifel, 1995. [4] + 229 pages, map and drawings, paper. Price:
      DM 65. 
     
   
  The renowned German bryologist Ruprecht Düll had previously published a
  list of Cretan bryophytes (in 1966) and its update (in 1973). Building upon Preston's
  checklists of Greek mosses and liverworts of 1981 and 1984, on other published records,
  and on his own, his pupils' and correspondents' gatherings, he has now produced a new,
  greatly expanded inventory of the Greek bryoflora, listing 151 species of Hepaticae and
  455 of Musci, not to count numerous infraspecific taxa. 
  The book consists essentially of two parts: the checklist proper, which gives concise
  summaries of known within-Greece distribution for each taxon, with but erratic reference
  to the relevant sources; and a series of papers with original specimen lists, with
  locality data, for given regions or individual islands: the Halkidhiki Peninsula and
  Rodhopi Mountains, the islands of Thasos (with E. Damm), Kerkira, and Kefallinia (with F.
  Preuss), Thessaly, and Rhodes, to which E. Sauer has added an enumeration of specimens
  from Greece kept in the herbarium at Saarbrücken. This, incidentally, is the only mention
  of a herbarium in which one may look for vouchers, the reader being left to guess that all
  other materials referred to are likely kept in Düll's personal herbarium. 
  Whereas the introductory geographical texts, both for Greece as a whole and the special
  areas treated in the accessory papers, are in German, the essentials (titles, explanations
  of symbols and abbreviations) are bilingual (German and English), and the locality data
  and stray notes in the main checklist are in English only. This will greatly enhance the
  usefulness of the book for an international readership, in agreement with the author's
  stated intent that it should assist in the much needed further bryological exploration of
  the country. In spite of some minor shortcomings (e.g. the unaccountable proliferation of
  the symbol x meaning "new for Greece", when at the same time older literature
  records are cited), Düll has certainly, by this publication, laid the foundations for an
  epoch of renewed activity and rapid progress in his field of study. W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Floras 
    
 
  
    Luis VILLAR, José Antonio SESÉ & José Vicente
      FERRÁNDEZ - Atlas de la flora del Pirineo Aragonés. I (Introducción.
      Lycopodiaceae-Umbelliferae). - Consejo de Protección de la Naturaleza de Aragón
      & Instituto de Estudio Altoaragoneses, Huesca, 1997 (ISBN 84-89862-04-4, this
      volume84-89862-03-6, the whole work). Pages XCI + 648, maps and drawings, 54 colour
      photographs on 16 extra plates, 2 loose, transparent overlay maps, hard cover. 
     
   
  This Flora, planned in two volumes, deals with the vascular plants of
  that portion of the Central Pyrenees that belongs to the Spanish province of Aragon, from
  the French border on the watershed line in the north to the Ebro Valley in the south. When
  complete, it will include treatments of 2300 species, each illustrated by an original
  drawing of c. 6 ( 6 cm, often showing diagnostic details to aid identification. These
  drawings are meant, to a degree, to replace keys and descriptive matter which were omitted
  so as not to duplicate those of the monumental Flora iberica. 
  One essential feature of the present Flora are the distribution maps, which were
  produced from a database system presently holding over 100,000 herbarium records, 40,000
  literature records plus an unspecified number of field observations. Most of this huge
  bulk of information has been assembled by Aragonese botanists during the last 30 or so
  years, when the herbarium in Jaca was built up; however, the main herbaria in Madrid and
  Barcelona were also consulted. The three data categories are represented by different
  symbols in a grid map consisting of 138 meshes of 10 ( 10 km, based on the UTM system. 
  Apart from the illustrations and maps, the treatment includes detailed indication of
  habitat, phytosociology, as well as local and general distribution. Vernacular
  designations are added whenever available, based on local sources. Life form and uses are
  shown by means of funny little pictograms which, while initially somewhat reminiscent of
  guide booklets for camping or hiking tourists, give lots of information in a nutshell.
  There are full indexes covering almost every imaginable feature except the colour
  photographs, which are gorgeous but for the time being remain anonymous as to author, and
  difficult to spot (a temporary drawback that will no doubt be taken care of in the second
  volume). 
  It has taken less than 6 years to prepare this first volume, covering the
  pteridophytes, gymnosperms, apetalous and choripetalous dicots (i.e., those groups that
  were included in the two first volumes of Flora europaea). During this period, over 8000
  new specimens were collected and about 50 species newly added to the flora. This work is
  one more demonstration of the astounding productivity and skill of Spanish botanists,
  features for which Spain may be rightly envied by the other countries of Europe. W.G. 
 
  
    Daniel JEANMONOD & Hervé Maurice BURDET (ed.) -
      Compléments au Prodrome de la flore corse. Asteraceae - I, par Jacques GAMISANS &
      Daniel JEANMONOD. - Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques, Ville de Genève, 1998 (ISBN
      2-8277-0813-2). 340 pages, black-and-white illustrations, laminated cover. 
     
   
  My last review of this Flora (in OPTIMA Newsletter 32: (5)-(6). 1997)
  was decidedly unkind but concluded with the wish that the continuation of the series might
  be worthy of its beginnings. I am glad to find my wish satisfied. The present fascicle is
  the largest published so far. It gets the treatment of the Compositae off the ground,
  which is by far the most sizeable family still to be dealt with, and is a major step
  towards the conclusion of the whole work. It has been written by two authors who are at
  the same time skilled botanists and keen experts of Corsica, and who have shared the
  treatment of individual genera among themselves. 
  The layout and general style of the Flora has not of course been changed, and its
  somewhat archaic habit of extensive and rather unpalatable specimen enumerations remains.
  What also remains is the generous illustration policy with original plant drawings [by
  Sierra Ràfols] and scanning micrographs of cypselas for most species treated, as well as
  grid distribution maps. 
  The contents of this instalment are left rather vague. There is an introductory
  statement that it is meant to include the Asteroideae in the sense of Bremer,
  implying that the tribes Lactuceae and Cardueae, belonging to the Cichorioideae,
  are not treated - which is indeed so. On searching, one will however find that the four
  Corsican genera of Senecioneae, although keyed out individually at the onset, are
  also missing: Senecio, Petasites, Tussilago, and Adenostyles
  (misnamed Cacalia, in disrespect of Art. 57 and Rec. 14A of the Code; incidentally,
  two other generic names adopted here will have to change: Asteriscus and
  Chrysanthemum, but the need for these changes was not yet apparent when this volume went
  to print). This leaves us with 9 tribes and 44 genera (including aliens) that are treated
  here. 
  The basic treatments are rather terse, sometimes disappointingly so. Indication of
  status is often quite cursory, and while the date of first known record is mentioned for Eupatorium
  adenophorum, for other recent xenophytes (e.g. Aster squamatus and the Conyza
  species) one is left to infer it from the specimen and/or literature citations. Species
  only doubtfully present, or to be excluded, are not set off typographically against the
  full members of the flora, which may easily induce into error a reader unfamiliar with the
  French language. Another apparent shortcoming is the lack of reference to non-Corsican
  subspecies, particularly when only the typical subspecies is known to occur on the island,
  as with Bellis annua, Anacyclus radiatus, or Gnaphalium uliginosum.
  Depending on what it is contrasted against, Achillea millefolium subsp. millefolium
  can have quite different meanings... 
  There are other treatments, however, which are rich in critical detail and discussion
  of variation, distribution, taxonomy, etc., and which are important contributions to a
  better understanding of critical groups and complexes. Examples of this kind may be found
  in Eupatorium, Filago, Helichrysum, Xanthium, Anthemis,
  and other genera (invariably those authored by Jeanmonod). 
  This new addition to the Briquet legacy that makes of Geneva the Mecca of Corsican
  botany, while not exempt of weaknesses and minor defaults, is in general terms worthy of
  the great tradition into which it places itself. W.G. 
 
  
    Dimitrios PHITOS, Arne STRID & Sven SNOGERUP (ed.)
      - Flora hellenica. Volume one, edited by Arne STRID & Kit TAN. - Koeltz,
      Königstein, 1997 (ISBN 3-87429-391-2, this volume; 3-87429-390-4, the whole work). Pages
      [I]-XXXVI, 1-392, [393-513], 515-547, coloured frontispiece, maps, hard cover. Price: DM
      280. 
     
   
  This is the first volume of the long expected and much needed Flora
  hellenica, developed under a steering (editorial) committee composed of Dimitrios Phitos
  (chairman), Arne Strid (secretary), and Sven Snogerup. The Flora aims to cover all wild
  vascular plants that can be found within the current political boundaries of Greece,
  including the Aegean Islands. This volume treats 27 families, four of the gymnosperms and
  the rest ranging from Salicaceae to Caryophyllaceae, following as a rule the same sequence
  as in Flora europaea. Vascular cryptogams were left for the last volume. 
  The introduction includes a section on the organisation of the Flora as well as useful
  chapters on geography, geology, climate, vegetation, phytogeography, and history of
  botanical exploration of the country. Here the reader would perhaps have appreciated some
  information on the Flora Hellenica Project, the plan of the work (number of volumes,
  intended periodicity, etc.), and even some kind of brief presentation of the contributors
  of treatments of genera. 
  Families comprising a remarkable number of species are Chenopodiaceae, Polygonaceae,
  Amaranthaceae, and especially Caryophyllaceae. The treatment of the latter is really
  impressive, including accounts of genera such as Arenaria (20 species) by D.
  Phitos, Cerastium (23) and Dianthus (44) by A. Strid, Minuartia (30)
  by G. Kamari and, the most striking, Silene (119 species and 19 additional
  subspecies) contributed by W. Greuter (with collaborators). Nomenclatural novelties were
  kept at a minimum - 12 in total - and are listed at the end of the volume. 
  For each species a complete description, relevant synonyms and type information are
  provided, as well as environmental (habitat, substrate), altitudinal, phenological and
  geographical ranges. In many cases, useful comments on variation, differences with close
  taxa, or other aspects are added. Descriptions are adequate in length and terminology
  (although their omission in families containing only one genus and in genera including one
  species might be considered a drawback). Each species description includes a few
  diagnostic phrases in italics, a feature that users will welcome. Chromosome numbers
  follow immediately after species and subspecies descriptions. Examined material is cited
  only exceptionally, and neither illustrations nor references to published illustrations -
  except in a few cases - are provided. 
  Distribution in Greece is indicated by reference to the 13 floristic regions into which
  the country has been divided for the purpose of the Flora. An special map in the
  introduction shows the limits and acronyms of regions; the actual names of regions in
  continental Greece and Crete can be found on a second map, but designations of other
  insular regions (IoI, Kik, WAe, EAe and Nae) remain unexplained. Geographical information
  is complemented, for almost every species and subspecies, by useful distribution maps. As
  many as 722 such maps were automatically generated from a database and are reproduced in
  block at the end of the volume, at an adequate scale (six to a page) and accompanied by
  captions including data on habitat, altitude, geography, etc. The volume ends with a long
  list of cited literature and an extensive index to scientific names. 
  The 110 genera, some 600 species and 122 additional subspecies treated in this book may
  still represent a small fraction of the rich Greek flora, but the number of endemics
  included - 101 species and 54 subspecies, if my counts are accurate - clearly demonstrates
  the enormous value of this volume as well as of the whole project. Needless to add, this
  is a most useful and highly recommended book. We eagerly await the next volume and,
  eventually, completion of the whole work. Juan B. MARTÍNEZ-LABORDE 
 
  
    Karl Heinz RECHINGER (ed.) - Flora iranica. Flora des
      iranischen Hochlandes und der umrahmenden Gebirge. Persien Afghanistan, Teile von
      West-Pakistan, Nord-Iraq, Azerbaidjan, Turkmenistan. Lfg. 173, Cyperaceae, by Ilkka
      KUKKONEN. - Akademische Druck- und Verlagsanstalt, Graz (ISBN 3-201-00728-5, the whole
      work). 307 pages, 42 extra plates of drawings, paper. Price: DM 339. 
     
   
  Rubiaceae, pteridophytes and, as the juiciest morsel, the huge genus
  Astragalus: if my record is correct, that's about all that remains to be done before Flora
  iranica is complete. By now it is the most voluminous Flora ever edited (and to a major
  part, written) single-handedly by one botanist, the most species-rich, and since
  Boissier's Flora orientalis was completed over a century ago, the one covering the largest
  territory. 
  Karl Heinz Rechinger, the hero of this whole huge venture and now well in his nineties,
  has had skilled and efficient help for producing the current, new volume. Cyperaceae,
  after all, are a special kind of plants (they deter even grazing bovines), attracting a
  particular sort of botanists; one will thus readily sympathise with Rechinger for having
  handed them over to a passionate expert in the field: Ilkka Kukkonen, who has authored the
  text as a whole and has, to no one's surprise, written a flawless account. Assistance in
  editorial matters was available through Ian Hedge, an old crack of Flora iranica and
  excellently suited for the task. While his role is duly acknowledged in print, one vitally
  important contribution remains, as usual, unmentioned, being tacitly understood: without
  the devoted help, restless activity and punctilious care of Wilhelmina Rechinger not only
  the present volume but many of its precursors would look less palatable than they do - or
  might not exist at all! 
  The Flora iranica area is not a centre of diversity of Cyperaceae, yet with 20 genera
  and 189 species they are a sizeable part of the territory's vascular flora. Carex
  (85 species) and Cyperus (45 species) are the largest genera, followed by Schoenoplectus
  (12) and Eleocharis (11). Under Schoenoplectus the single new combination
  here proposed was validated: S. lacustris subsp. hippolyti (misspelled 'Hippolytii'
  but in fact based on Scirpus hippolyti V. Krecz., a species dedicated to Ippolit
  Krascheninnikov whose forename had been correctly hellenised Hippolytos by the original
  author). 
  Sedges are not aesthetically attractive plants, so one neither expects nor will find
  colour plates. Even the traditional herbarium sheet photographs of Flora iranica would
  have been of little use and were justifiably omitted. Much more appropriate, and extremely
  welcome, are Marja Koistinen's careful and detailed drawings of diagnostic details (and
  sometime habit) of most of the species, that fill no less than 42 plates. Condoning the
  not very practical and somewhat confusing numbering of figures and lettering of scale
  bars, one will find that these figures are the most attractive and unrestrictedly useful
  feature of the present volume. W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Flower books 
    
 
  
    Jacques GAMISANS & Jean-François MARZOCCHI - La
      flore endémique de la Corse. - Edisud, Aix-en-Provence, 1996 (ISBN 2-85744-777-9).
      208 pages, maps, coloured graphs, and colour photographs, laminated cover. 
     
   
  This book is a hymn to the beauty and originality of the Corsican flora,
  written and illustrated by two of its keenest lovers and experts. 
  The endemic flora of the island has been defined very loosely for the purpose of this
  book, to comprise not only endemics of Corsica proper, or those of the W. Mediterranean
  islands in general, but also to include many taxa extending to Sicily and Italy, the Alps
  or Pyreneees, S. France, Spain, N. Africa, and even as far east as Croatia and Serbia (Cardamine
  chelidonia) or Crete (Lepidium hirtum subsp. oxyotum). A detailed list
  at the end, which includes many complementary informations, enumerates 296 such endemic
  taxa, of any rank down to the simple forma but discounting hybrids. 
  The iconographic treatment which is at the core of the book concerns no less that two
  thirds (197) of the endemic plants of Corsica. Each is illustrated by one, rarely two
  excellent colour photographs of which the only drawback is lack of documentation: except
  for the few landscape pictures the locality is never mentioned, nor is the photographer
  named (which one assumes to be Marzocchi for the most part, just as Gamisans is the likely
  author of most of the text). The text for each taxon is brief and lacks descriptive
  features but mentions distribution and ecology. Arrangement is by habitat, each
  altitudinal belt (coastal, thermo-, meso- and supramediterranean, montane,
  oromediterranean, subalpine, alpine) as well as wetland plants and ubiquists being treated
  separately, usually introduced by a few landscape pictures. 
  This is a unique documentation, both in terms of its beauty and coverage. The one third
  of Corsican endemics lacking from the main treatment is of scant importance: it largely
  consists of doubtfully distinct or doubtfully present taxa, or apomicts (Taraxacum,
  Hieracium), or utterly non-photogenic plants (many grasses). What is there is a
  virtually complete photo-atlas of the stenochorous element of the island flora. The book's
  avowed scope is to make Corsicans aware of the priceless botanical patrimony in their
  trust and of the need to preserve it - a scope which I dare say it fulfils ideally, to the
  benefit of local people and visitors alike. W.G. 
 
  
    Dêmêtrios MPAMPALÔNAS - Maurobouni Krousiôn..
      Oikotouristikos odêgos. - Anaptuxiakê Kilkis, Kilkis, 1995. 239 pages,
      black-and-white and colour maps, colour photographs, laminated cover. 
     
   
  There are several "Black Mountains" in Greece, and the
  Mavrovouni of this book is not the best known among them. It is not even recognised in the
  Greek mountain flora, being much too low (1179 m) to qualify as a "real"
  mountain. It is an innocent-looking wooded ridge on the divide between the provinces of
  Kilkis and Serres, in northern Greece, not far from the state border with S.W. Bulgaria.
  It has not achieved botanical fame in the past, nor does its commonplace flora justify
  such fame. Yet it was made the subject of a botanical primer which is in the same time a
  première. How did this come about? 
  It all goes back to the European rural development programme LEADER having promoted the
  building of tourist bungalows in the small village of Protokerasia, on the southern slopes
  of the mountains. Tourist development plans included the set-up of a small "botanical
  museum", for which Dimitrios Babalonas (as he pronounces his name, and writes it when
  unaffected by the bonds of ISO transcription standards) and his team of the botanical
  institute at Salonica took responsibility. This booklet, illustrated by the author's own
  plant photographs, is a by-product of these efforts. Calling itself an "eco-touristic
  guide" and entirely written in Greek, it bears witness of the present efforts to
  promote the eco-touristic fashion within Greece but is equally well suited for use in
  biological teaching of school-classes. 
  Having leafed through this booklet you will perhaps fancy the prospect of hiking
  holidays in Protokerasia, where you will no doubt be heartily welcomed. Do not be deterred
  by the apparent lack of extraordinary plants, nor by finding some of the pictures to be
  rather mediocre and/or ill suited for identification. This booklet was never intended for
  a major item in terms of science or bibliophily. Yet some of the names mentioned in the
  picture captions, which are obviously wrong, might usefully be reconsidered and rectified
  if and when a reprint is envisaged. I can offer the following (non-exhaustive)
  suggestions: "Aristolochia pallida" is A. rutunda; "Silene
  conica" is S. subconica; "Hieracium hoppeanum" is likely
  a Picris; "Onobrychis pindicola" is Astragalus cf. monspessulanus;
  and "Salix purpurea" features its close vicarious relative, S.
  amplexicaulis. W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Floristic
  inventories and checklists 
    
 
  
    Jean-Pierre LEBRUN & Adélaïde STORK -
      Enumération des plantes à fleurs d'Afrique tropicale. Vol. IV - Gamopétales:
      Clethraceae à Lamiaceae, avec la collaboration de Laurent Gautier, Genève (Sapotaceae).
      - Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques, Genève, 1997 (ISBN 2-8277-0113-8). 712 pages, 2
      figures, laminated cover. Price: SFr 100. 
     
   
  The fourth volume of Lebrun & Stork's Enumération brings this major
  checklist to its conclusion. It covers most of the African continent, filling the gap
  between Med-Checklist and the Flora of Southern Africa (neither so far completed): a
  substantial sector of the world's tropical zone, in which, as we now know, about 26,300
  species of flowering plants (excluding gymnosperms) are presently recognised. Last time we
  reported on this work (in OPTIMA Newsletter 30: (20). 1996) the estimate still stood at
  24,000, which means that the increase as compared to the expected figure is substantial.
  Yet the African tropics, contrary to South Africa and Madagascar, do not range among the
  areas with greatest botanical diversity on a world scale. 
  This final instalment is more than twice as thick (and costly) as each of its
  predecessors. This is due at least in part to the larger number of species covered, but
  also to a somewhat more generous practice of synonym citation, to a substantial bulk (95
  pages) of additions and corrections to previous volumes, and to the presence of a
  cumulative, synonymic index to families and genera - a most welcome item, especially as it
  also covers the end-of-volume additions and novelties that else might easily confuse or
  discourage the user. 
  It is good to have this work completed. As we all know (think of Med-Checklist), any
  incomplete torso of such an inventory is a constant source of irritation. Regular updating
  of the list would of course be desirable. It might be more easily achieved, and of more
  immediate use, if it were possible to transfer the integrated contents of the Enumération
  to a database, ideally in a format that can be searched via the Internet. Would this,
  perhaps, be a task that could be assumed or monitored by the AETFAT? W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Excursions 
    
 
  
    Ina DINTER - Botanische Exkursion. Nordzypern, das
      Kleinod im Mittelmeer. 15 Tage 09.-23.03.1997. [Ausarbeitung]. - Privately
      assembled/duplicated, D-74348 Lauffen, 1997. 77 numbered sheets, black-and-while
      illustrations, paper and plastic front cover sheet. 
     
   
  This is the 1997 version of the elaborate post-excursion document of
  which the 1996 issue has been presented last time (in OPTIMA Newsletter 32: (13). 1997).
  It is unaltered as to the introductory matter, itineraries and location maps, and
  literature list, but the specimen enumerations have been adapted (usually expanded) to
  what was actually observed in 1997. The identifications of orchids were revised by a
  specialist, H. Baumann. The cumulative plant list at the end now takes 12 pages instead of
  7, due to many additions and a new format that provides for the mention of herbarium
  vouchers (collected 1994-1997 and kept in Ms Dinter's private herbarium), which adds to
  the scientific relevance of the document. In compensation, the bird list and pre-excursion
  plant list have been dropped. W.G. 
 
  
    Ulrich KULL & Stergos DIAMANTOGLOU - Kreta.
      Allgemeiner Exkursionsbericht. Kumulative Pflanzenliste der Exkursionen 1974-1995 zugleich
      Führer zur botanisch-geologischen Exkursion der Gesellschaft für Naturkunde in
      Württemberg April 1998. [Arbeiten und Mitteilungen aus dem Biologischen Institut der
      Universität Stuttgart, 23.] - Stuttgart, 1998. [2] + VIII + 365 pages,
      black-and-white illustrations, paper. 
     
   
  What a surprising book! Allegedly a cumulative report on excursions of
  Stuttgart University students to Crete during 22 years, laid down in preparation of a
  botanical-geological excursion of the Land's natural history society in 1998, this is in
  reality a full-scale naturalistic, historical, cultural and socio-political manual for
  German-speaking travellers to the island. The link to the student excursions themselves is
  tenuous if at all apparent, although the authors may indeed have drawn on preparatory
  seminar work (doubtless including their own) of prospective participants. Not even a
  record of excursion dates or itineraries is included (the years 1984, 1989 and 1992 are
  casually mentioned in the preface, plant lists from spring 1981 have been duplicated
  [OPTIMA Newsletter 14-16: 67-68. 1983], 1974 and 1995 can be assumed from the title). The
  only direct fall-out of excursion activities, the plant lists (non-cumulative and by
  localities only) at the end, are the one really weak chapter, with but erratic mention of
  vouchers and blatantly incomplete species inventories. 
  As an old Cretan crack I have read this book with interest at first, then with growing
  fascination. It is hard to imagine how such a thorough coverage of so many subjects could
  have been achieved (ever and again one finds the most recent literature cited and sensibly
  incorporated into the overall picture). Ulrich Kull and his Greek co-author, both
  scientifically active in general botany, are masters in abstracting and synthesising in a
  fluid and utterly readable style the piecemeal results of authors in all fields of science
  and humanities. Just try it out: read the chapters on geology, past climate, islands and
  plant evolution, history from antiquity to World War II and up to the present day, local
  crafts and culture, and you have it. There is a stress on the description of
  archaeological, mainly Minoan sites and geological strata; a whole chapter, devoted to
  pharmaceutically important Cretan plants, has been reproduced from an otherwise
  unobtainable duplicated report by the Schönfelders; but you will also delight in reading
  small essays on, e.g., the Cretan date palm (my personal favourite) or - quoted from
  Erhard Kästner's book - the local taverns. 
  Sorry if I sound too enthusiastic. I just happen to like the book and to be sorry for
  all those who, due to their insufficient mastery of the German language, will be unable to
  share my pleasure as a reader. But, well - I will have to find something to criticise,
  too, so as to do justice to my nasty reputation. So there we go: that most original
  (judging from its epithet) and obviously new species discussed on p. 100, Bellevalia
  brevispina, is not described, let alone validated, so that we may never learn what it
  really is... W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Chorology 
    
 
  
    Oriol de BOLÒS I CAPDEVILA, Xavier FONT I CASTELL,
      Xavier PONS I FERNÁNDEZ & Josep VIGO I BONADA (ed.) - Atlas corològic de la flora
      vascular dels Països Catalans. Volum 7 [ORCA: Atlas corològic, 7]. - Institut
      d'Estudis Catalans, Secció de Ciències Biològiques, Carme 47, E-08001 Barcelona, 1997
      (ISBN 84-7283-380-1). [375], [768] pages, maps 1146-1519, paper. 
     
   
  The floristic mapping scheme for Catalonia, governed by the Organisation
  for the Mapping of plants of the Catalan Countries has been referred to repeatedly in this
  column (see OPTIMA Newsletter 20-24: (45-46). 1988; 30: (28). 1996; 31: (13-14). 1997; 32:
  (17-18)). Suffice it here to confirm what I wrote last time, that the speed of production
  of the chorlogical atlas for Catalonia has become admirably and commendably high. The set
  of 374 new maps included in vol. 7 - the largest so far produced in one go - completes the
  serial treatment up to and including species No. 926 in the Flora manual dels Països
  Catalans, i.e., to the end of the Cruciferae. Other sizeable families here treated are the
  Lythraceae, Onagraceae, Thymelaeaceae, and Papaveraceae. 
  As in earlier volumes, some previously numbered species and a few subspecies were
  omitted, mostly because their wild occurrence has not so far been confirmed beyond doubt.
  Again, a number of additions compensates these apparent losses: Vella lucentina
  recently described as new, Diplotaxis ilorcitana previously neglected, Ludwigia
  repens, Oenothera glazioviana, Myriophyllum heterophyllum, Thymelaea
  gussonei, Fumaria melillaica, Sisymbrium crassifolium subsp. arundanum,
  and Lepidium cardamines, all recently discovered in Catalonia. The sad fact that
  one species, Trapa natans, is now apparently extinct in the territory covered
  should also be noted. W.G. 
 
  
    T. NIKOLI6, D. BUKOVEC, J. SOPF & S. D. JELASKA -
      Kartiranje flore Hrvatske. Mogu6nosti i standardi. [Natura croatica, 7, Suppl. 1]. -
      Hrvatski Prirodoslovni Muzej, Zagreb, 1998. [2] + 62 pages, graphs and maps, 8 loose,
      transparent overlay maps, laminated cover. 
     
   
  This pamphlet, written in Croatian but with summary, captions and
  subtitles in English, discusses and defines the bases for a new project of mapping the
  flora of Croatia. With Toni Nikoli6's Index florae croaticae (see OPTIMA Newsletter 32:
  (12-13). 1997) nearing completion, a standard for defining the taxonomic mapping units now
  exists. However, brainpower is still scarce, available data are old (only one fifth on
  average, we are told, dates from less than 50 years ago!) and often too vaguely located to
  be useful for mapping purposes. New field prospection and the use of computing facilities
  (GIS in particular) are therefore essential pre-requisites for the project to succeed. 
  Much of the text, and all its illustrative and tabular material, relate to the problems
  of grid mapping. There is an in-depth methodological discussion, involving comparison of
  three grid systems, their filtering effects, and interconvertibility of data: the German
  (now Central European) MTB [Meßtischblatt] system using geographic co-ordinates and mesh
  dimensions of 6' latitude by 10' longitude; Croatia's similarly based "national
  grid" reflecting their topographical maps 1 : 25,000, where the meshes are 15' by
  15'; and the UTM system applied among others by the Atlas florae europaeae, using 50 km
  (or 10 km) squares in transverse Mercator projection. W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Regional studies of flora and
  vegetation 
    
 
  
    Jordi CARRERAS & Josep VIGO - Mapa de vegetació
      de Catalunya 1 : 50 000. Puigcerdà 217 (36-10). - Institut Cartogràfic de Catalunya
      & Direcció General del Medi Natural, Barcelona, 1997 (ISBN 84-393-4213-6). 66 pages,
      map and colour legend, flexible cover; with folded colour map by Jordi CARRERAS, Ramon M.
      MASALLES, Ignasi SORANO & Josep VIGO; flexible cover and twin plastic pouch. 
     
   
  
    Empar CARRILLO & Josep VIGO - Mapa de vegetació
      de Catalunya 1 : 50 000. Gósol 254 (35-11). - Institut Cartogràfic de Catalunya
      & Direcció General del Medi Natural, Barcelona, 1997 (ISBN 84-7283-373-9 &
      84-393-4375-2). 95 pages, graphs, map and colour legend, flexible cover; with folded
      colour map by Jordi CARRERAS, Empar CARRILLO, Xavier FONT, Josep M. NINOT, Ignasi SORANO
      & Josep VIGO; flexible cover and twin plastic pouch. 
     
   
  These two maps and correlated explanatory texts are part of a series
  which, one supposes, will once cover the whole of Spanish Catalonia. Curiously, there is
  no concrete mention anywhere of other planned or published maps of this series, just the
  cursory statement (item 15, p. 39) that various maps have been published so far, plus the
  explicit citation of one such map (No. 255, published in 1994) among the references. When
  taken together, the latter and the two present sheets cover a continuous territory in the
  high ranges of the Pyrenees. To complete the mapping project (if it exists as such), no
  less than 86 sheets of the national topographic map 1 : 50,000 are to be taken care of. 
  Each folded map sheet bears, in recto colour print, the vegetation map proper along
  with detailed, colour-coded captions, two roughly north-to-south directed, schematic
  vegetation profiles, and three ancillary, smaller maps showing the topography, relief, and
  geological substrata. The potential vegetation is represented by different colour shades,
  the actual vegetation by symbols and numbers. A full and fully coded English version of
  the captions can be found at the end of each explanatory brochure. 
  The Puicerdà map overlaps in its eastern half with a vegetation map with the same
  scale, previously published by two of the same authors - Vigo & Masalles - as an annex
  to the former's book on the plant cover of the Vall de Ribes (see OPTIMA Newsletter 32:
  (19). 1997). Both maps include the Puigmal (2910 m) as their highest point, but they
  differ not only in range and colouring but also in the degree of detail presented, this
  new one being more finely differentiated. As it concerns a border area, it also shows that
  the French territory is not being treated, which is in some contrast with the traditional
  claim of Catalan botanists of being in charge of their plants on either side of the
  national frontier. 
  The Gósol map and booklet do not transcend the boundary of Spain. The Sierra de Cadí,
  culminating at 2648 m, is at its core, and indeed its main reason of being appears to be
  the fact that much of the mapped area (the Parc natural del Cadí-Moixeró) is protected.
  The nature conservancy office has apparently co-funded the work, and taken charge of half
  of the printing. This being so, it is hard to understand why the Park is barely mentioned
  in passing in the text, and its boundaries do not appear on any of the maps. 
  Hopefully I will soon be able to report on further published maps of this series, and
  perhaps provide an overview of the presently somewhat mysterious overall scheme of
  publishing. W.G. 
 
  
    Theofanês KÔNSTANTINIDÊS - Ê hlôrida kai ê
      blastêsê tôn oreôn Geraneia Pateras kai Kithairôn. - Thesis, Ethniko kai
      Kapodistriako Panepistêmio Athênôn, Athêna, 1997. [3] + IX + 465 pages,
      black-and-white figures, graphs and maps, one colour map, paper. 
     
   
  The PhD thesis of Fanis Konstantinidis, placed under the joint
  supervision of Professors Yannitsaros (Athens) and Phitos (Patras), deals with a group of
  three rather low and fairly well isolated mountains of the Greek mainland, in the
  south-western corner of Attica, that were most imperfectly explored so far: Mt Yerania
  (1351 m) lies to the west of Megara, just opposite Korinthos, whereas Mt Pateras (1132 m)
  and Mt Kitheron (1409 m) are situated to the north of Megara, all three bordering the
  easternmost extension of the Korinthian gulf. 
  The core of this work is a thorough, most valuable new floristic inventory of the area,
  whose result is indeed impressive. The number of known vascular plant species has
  increased about fourfold, to reach a total of 1210 (including 12 pteridophytes). In terms
  of single mountains, the rate of new records lies between 80 and 85 %! Several species
  found were new to Greece, or at least to Central Greece (Sterea Ellas), and one (Centaurea
  cithaeronea, described separately beforehand) proved to be new to science. In total,
  more than 4000 specimens were collected for the purpose of this study. 
  There are other chapters in this thesis besides the floristic catalogue. The obligatory
  series of (partly new) chromosome counts may be mentioned, although they are of little
  relevance in this particular context. More important is an intelligently written analysis
  of phytogeographical affinities, concentrating on the Greek endemic element and providing
  newly assessed threat categories for the rarer ones. Using the new IUCN criteria, several
  endemic taxa were found to be rare, 8 of them, vulnerable, and a single one endangered:
  Trinia guicciardii, a dioecious, taxonomically somewhat controversial umbel only known
  from Mt Kitheron and Mt Parnonas. 
  The vegetation is as one would expect for low, genuinely Mediterranean Greek mountains,
  and the concluding chapter dealing with it is by consequence rather short. The
  Mediterranean forest belt, dominated by Pinus halepensis woods and their
  degradation stages, ends at about 800 m of altitude, being replaced by fir woods (Abies
  cephalonica) above. Mt Yerania has some ophiolithic areas as its peculiar feature, on
  which a dozen of "serpentinophytes", mostly with links to Euboea, were found to
  grow. 
  Altogether, this is a valuable, careful and well written work which yields good promise
  for the future of Greek botany in general and of the author himself in particular. W.G. 
 
  
    Giôrgos SFÊKAS - Ekthesê gia tê hlôrida tês
      periohês gyro apo tên tehnêtê limnê Plastêra (Megdoba) tou nomou Karditsas 1996.
      - Privately published, [Athens], [1998?]. 30 numbered sheets, plastic front and paper back
      cover sheet, stuck-in map on back cover. 
     
   
  This is a duplicated report on the flora of the Plastira Lake and its
  surroundings, visited by George Sfikas in 1995 and 1996 on behalf of the Department of
  Ecology of Athens University. It principally consists of a 25-page enumeration of 514
  species of vascular plants believed to occur in the area. This list is stated to be based
  both on a compilation of published records (in which respect it is, however, blatantly
  incomplete) and on the author's own collections. 
  Plastira is a large artificial lake that originated when, due to construction of the
  Tavropou dam at a date not specified, the former plain of Nevropolis was flooded. That
  plain, together with its surroundings, was one of the classical sites of Greek botany,
  having been extensively explored by Heldreich and Haussknecht on their 1885 expedition to
  northern Greece. It would be a meritorious undertaking to check which of the plants
  collected on the plain in 1885 still exist in the surroundings, and which have gone.
  However, Sfikas claims to be confident that all can eventually be found again, so he lists
  old and new records indiscriminately (or so he states), which is a real pity. The coverage
  of his list in fact extends much beyond the lake and its surroundings (his letter
  "N.", for Neuropolis), also comprising the hills to the east ("A.P."),
  the mountain slopes to the west ("D.P."), as well as Mt Borlero
  ("Mp."), Mt Voutsikaki ("B."), Mt Kazarma ("Ka."), and Mt
  Karava ("K."). 
  It so happens that, with Brigitte Zimmer, I shortly visited the area in question in
  June 1995, collecting less than 90 species - of which 20 are absent from Sfikas's list,
  including several additional genera and one family (Valerianaceae). We actually were in
  search of a plant that has obviously disappeared, having been collected on the plain in
  1885 and identified as Isoetes setacea but more likely conspecific with the
  (presumably now extinct) Greek endemic I. heldreichii. This I mention to show how
  important from the point of view of conservation a thorough balance of the wins and losses
  consequent to the dam construction might be. 
  As both its presentation and contents show, this is an unambitious and very preliminary
  list. What I have written above is not therefore meant as a criticism but as an
  encouragement to produce a better and more definitive document. This would require a more
  thorough literature search (Isoetaceae, too, are unmentioned!) and further field work
  (e.g. at the southern end of the lake, obviously not visited, where a critical but
  immature Silene species was observed, belonging to the group of S. congesta
  and S. flavescens but growing outside the known distribution range of either). W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Applied botany 
    
 
  
    Alonso VERDE, Diego RIVERA & Concepción OBÓN -
      Etnobotánica en las Sierras de Segura y Alcaraz: las plantas y el hombre. - Instituto
      de Estudios Albacetenses, [Serie I, Estudios No. 102], Albacete, 1998 (ISBN
      84-87136-80-x). 351 pages, 1 figure, 2 maps (one with colours), black-and-white and some
      colour photographs, laminated cover. 
     
   
  Do we witness a resurgence of ethnobotany, lately? If so, we should
  better hurry: time is running short, and any large-scale field survey of the kind that
  underlies this book is largely a last-minute rescue operation. World-wide, even in
  apparently remote areas, the TV-driven technological wave breaks in and old, oral
  traditions are lost forever in a matter of one or two generations. What cultural and
  practical riches we are losing we shall never know, except when, as was here done, a
  faithful record is made and kept for the future. 
  The mountainous south-western part of Albacete Province is an area with a varied, still
  strong rural and pastoral tradition. The present book, which follows established
  ethnographical procedures, mirrors faithfully this plurality in its many-faceted approach.
  Following some preliminary matter it starts with a chapter on vernacular plant
  designations, their linguistic roots and the way in which they are formed, with an
  interesting side-view on the role of binominal designations, prefiguring scientific
  binomials, in popular parlance. The next major chapter concerns the plants' role in folk
  lore, from ritual uses to myths, songs and children's plays. Follows the main and largest
  chapter on actual plant uses: for ornament and crafts, as food and fodder, dies, tans,
  perfumes and incenses, fire wood, cosmetics, medicines and poisons, spices... The variety
  of plant uses is boundless, incredible for a city-dweller of our time, yet endearing and
  enriching at the same time. 
  Throughout the main text, plants are referred to by their vernacular designations
  alone. An extensive (100 pages!) bidirectional list at the end provides the equivalence
  between popular and scientific names, serving as a dictionary to the botanical reader.
  What is wanting, though, is an index. Without page references to each mention of the
  various plants in the descriptive chapters the book is hard to consult and, for most
  purposes, virtually useless. This is the single but, unfortunately, major criticism one
  has to spell out for an otherwise fascinating, well written and moderately well
  illustrated volume. W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Conservation
  topics, Red Data books 
    
 
  
    Linus SVENSSON (ed.) - Understanding biodiversity. An
      agenda for research into biodiversity prepared by the European Working Group on Research
      and Biodiversity (EWGRB). - Commission of the European Communities,
      Directorate-General XII for Science, Research and Development, Stockholm & Brussels,
      1997. 122 pages, paper. [Electronic version at: http://www.oden.
      se/~ewgrb/scientificagenda.html<]/font> 
     
   
  Groups and programmes concerned with the study and/or preservation
  and/or valorisation of biological diversity are presently springing up like mushrooms
  after a mild autumn rain. It is difficult to keep track of them, not to mention the
  problem of knowing which are influential or (alternatively?) competent. The group that has
  been established under the acronym EWGRB operates under the umbrella of the
  Directorate-General XII (science, research and development) of the Commission of the
  European Communities, in Brussels. Few of its twenty plus members are active in biological
  research and, unsurprisingly, none is a plant taxonomist. Among the 50-odd participants to
  the Conference on Research and Biodiversity (Stockholm, April 1997) that stands at the
  basis of the present report there happened to be a single systematic botanist of renown.
  Major botanical institutions and organisations in biological systematics known to me were
  not among the 500 recipients of the questionnaire on which the report also draws. 
  Predictably the document, being largely influenced by governmental policies, is
  pervaded by an anthropocentric view of biological diversity, which is defined as "a
  strategic stock forming the basis for the sustainable use and development of ...
  agriculture, forestry, fishery, tourism and related industrial sectors... Furthermore,
  [it] is related to the quality of life ... in a more cultural sense, forming the physical
  [!] environment of every-day life and recreation..." As biologists we have learnt to
  live with this kind of prose, yet as an introduction to and general philosophy of a
  research agenda one will swallow twice before reading on. Having poked one's way through
  several poorly proof-read pages of mediocre English, one will find some reward. 
  For many years, and officially since its VI Meeting in Delfi 9 years ago, OPTIMA has
  voiced the need for more research on the systematics and biology of threatened plants, and
  of taxonomic and floristic research in general, as being a prerequisite for the effective
  and rational conservation of botanical diversity. In recent years, the Conference of
  Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity has forcibly endorsed such claims,
  recognising the existence of a "taxonomic impediment" and proclaiming a Global
  Taxonomic Initiative. The Darwin declaration, just published (on paper and on the
  Internet: http://www.anbg.gov.au/abrs/flora/webpubl/ darwinw.htm), has been operational in
  this respect and should be freely quoted and spread by all systematic biologists. 
  This new understanding of the vital role of biological systematics for conservation
  policy transpires, perhaps still too modestly, in several points of the EWGRB Document.
  Two themes of a brainstorming meeting of experts held in parallel to the Stockholm
  Conference were "What biodiversity is where" (being relevant to faunistic and
  floristic work), and "Making systematics operational" (which, for a realist,
  means: fund it). By way of consequence the main conclusions mention, among others, the
  following "tentative research priorities": Use of existing knowledge on
  biodiversity; Taxonomic skills and identification tools; Research on distribution and
  change in biodiversity; and Research on single species. All this is spot on from the point
  of view of OPTIMA, and more of the same is needed. Taxonomists: be prepared! W.G. 
 
  
    Jacques LAMBINON - Introduction of non-native plants into natural
      environments / Les introductions de plantes non indigènes dans l'environnement naturel.
      [Nature and environment / Sauvegarde de la nature, 87.] - Council of Europe / Conseil
      de l'Europe, Strasbourg, 1997 (ISBN 92-871-3389-1, English; 92-871-3388-3, French). 29 /
      28 pages, paper. 
     
   
  Having been commissioned by the Standing Committee of the Berne Convention to write a
  text on invasive plants and the problems they may cause, Lambinon chose not to add yet
  another manual to the vast literature on the topic, nor produce extensive lists for a
  catalogue, but rather, to dwell on some aspects that had been somewhat neglected in the
  past and whose presentation might be useful and thought-provoking. He has managed to write
  a small but utterly readable report that will, I believe, prove useful and welcome to
  many. 
  The first point he raises is the often surprisingly difficult distinction between
  native and introduced plants, a problem of which I had become well aware when starting to
  compile Med-Checklist, if not before. The second aspect follows therefrom: whether
  introduced plants do not also, sometimes at least, have a positive heritage and
  conservational value. Think of the poppy and cornflower, old introductions now regressing
  in many areas - to which I might add the example, from zoology, of the Cretan cri-cri goat
  introduced into the island by the Minoans in prehistoric times, that has provided the logo
  for the Hellenic Society for the Protection of Nature. A third problem, again related, is
  that of deliberate introductions, including re-introductions of plants that have
  disappeared or become depleted in the wild. 
  The concrete cases of invasive aliens and the danger they may present for the
  indigenous flora are dealt with in the fourth and final part, together with possible
  measures to forestall or remove such threat - to name: research [sic!], combat, and
  monitoring. 
  Altogether, this is a commendable brochure and a good example of how to spend public
  money in a modest yet efficient way. W.G. 
 
  
    Cesar GÓMEZ CAMPO [& 27 co-authors] - Libro rojo de especies
      vegetales amenazadas de las Islas Canarias. - Gobierno de Canarias, [no locality],
      1996 (ISBN 84-920730-9-8). 663 pages, maps, 14 colour photographs on 7 extra plates,
      paper. 
     
   
  This new red data book for the endemic flora of the Canary Islands closely resembles,
  in its concept and layout, the one for peninsular Spain and the Balearic Island published
  by the same Gómez-Campo a decade earlier (see OPTIMA Newsletter 25-29: (55). 1991). Again
  300 species are treated, each on two opposite pages, with the same subheadings and the
  same familiar distribution maps with blue grid circle imprints. The Canary flora being
  almost as rich in endemics as the Spanish mother land (which has the seventy-fold surface
  area!), and richer perhaps in very rare and local species, maintenance of the sacred
  figure 300 can be easily justified, as it permitted application of the same strict
  selection criteria as before: only taxonomically good (or uncontroversial, or at least
  new) species were admitted, preferably limited to a single island (or two, rarely more),
  and local even there. One will thus search in vain for flagship endemics such as the
  dragon tree or Canary date palm, neither being sufficiently threatened. Out of the three
  hundred listed species only a dozen non-threatened ones are treated, and even those that
  are simply rare were for the most part left out, whereas the endangered (105) and
  vulnerable (118) category each accounts for more than one third of the total! The list of
  excluded taxa, Gómez-Campo admits, is quite interesting - but then, of course, he does
  not publish it. 
  In spite of the heavy danger under which hundreds of the archipelago's endemics are
  presently placed, there is one circumstance that entitles to prudent optimism: in spite of
  previous claims that some species had completely vanished all that were ever described
  have again been found in recent times, so that no documented case of extinction exists
  (although one can of course theorise that several may have disappeared in the early phase
  of human colonisation, before anyone could describe and name them). We are not too late to
  save the whole lot for posterity - but a major effort of conservation will certainly be
  needed to achieve this goal. 
  This book is a perfect example of strict and consistent editing - no minor task if one
  thinks of the large number of contributing authors. This also means, unfortunately, that
  its weaknesses such as the absence of illustrations (for which the habitat photographs at
  the end are no real compensation) and of any comments on taxonomic affinities are general
  throughout. This is particularly regrettable in the case of that half dozen species not so
  far described or validly named but nevertheless included, of which no one except their
  inventor and prospective author (Arnoldo Santos) knows what they look like. They are: Argyranthemum
  vincentii, Cheirolophus anagensis, C. puntallanensis, Helianthemum
  cirae, H. lini, and Parolinia ariadnes (misspelled 'ariadnae').
  Here, therefore, is my plea to Arnoldo: go ahead and publish them now! W.G. 
 
  
    [Amerigo A. HOFMANN (ed.)] - Progetto di ricostituzione e
      valorizzazione delle pinete della costa grossetana. Piano integrato di lotta
      fitopatologica in ambiente forestale mediterraneo con particolare riguardo alle pinete di
      pino domestico della fascia costiera della Provincia di Grosseto. Accademia Italiana
      di Scienze Forestali, Firenze, 1995. 93 pages, drawings, graphs, colour map, paper. 
     
   
  The sandy coast of Tuscany is covered by extensive pine groves which in recent years
  have shown clear signs of degradation and even dieback. Since these woods are a prominent
  feature, not only in the landscape but in the region's economy, the said phenomena have
  caused general alarm and resulted in a complex, large-scale programme of study and
  reclamation funded from national and European sources. Two simultaneously published
  booklets, the present one and item 29 below, deal with the situation, the latter resulting
  from a conference held in Grosseto in October 1993, whereas the former, partly building on
  it, brings conclusions and concrete action plans on several levels. 
  There are about 13,000 hectares of coastal pine woods in Tuscany, made of three
  species: Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis), maritime pine (P. pinaster), and
  umbrella pine (P. pinea), of which the latter is the most widespread and most
  spectacular. Its native status is in doubt, and one believes that Phoenicians or Etruscans
  may have brought them in from southern Anatolia in the remote past. However this may be,
  the present woods were for the most part planted in historical times, are often privately
  owned, and are is a sensitive state of ecological balance. Dieback phenomena were observed
  in the early nineties, partly due to insect attack (aphids, moths and beetles) which,
  however, were diagnosed as being secondary afflictions consequent to low rainfall in
  consecutive years, to air pollution, to high salinity of the ground water resulting from
  excessive water demand for irrigation and tourism, and also to the direct treading and
  wheeling damage caused to the woods by beach visitors. 
  Measures here proposed include continued monitoring, dune reclamation, biological
  control of phytophagous insects, as well as limitation of direct access and groundwater
  pumping. It all seems logical and coherent, and one just marginally wonders where all the
  available funding (nowhere quantified) may have gone. W.G. 
 
  
    Ja. P. DIDUH, V. S. TKACENKO, P. G. PLJUTA, I. A. KOROTCENKO & T.
      V. FICAJLO - Porivnjal'na ocinka fitoriznomanitnosti zapovidnih stepovih ekosistem
      Ukraïni z metoju optimizaciï rezimiv ïh ohoroni (Phytodiversity comparative estimate of
      preserved steppe ecosystems in Ukraine for optimization of conservation regimens). -
      Institut botaniki im. M. G. Kolodnogo, Nacional'na Akademija Nauk Ukraïni, Kiïv, 1998
      (ISBN 966-02-0425-6). 76 pages, maps, graphs, paper. 
     
   
  This study of Ukrainian steppes and the problems of their conservation was made
  possible by funding through international programmes and U.S. state agencies, which also
  accounts for the presence of an extensive (8 pages) English summary version as well as
  bilingual captions for the tables and graphs. 
  The large Eurasian steppe biome has its western limit in the Ukraine, where steppes
  once covered two fifths of the national territory. Steppe destruction, which in recent
  times is often due to afforestation with non-native trees using powerful modern technology
  inclusive of slope terracing, is an important problem, as the Ukrainian steppe floras are
  rich in endemic species, many of which are under threat. Having been formed under a more
  xeric climate combined with grazing pressure, steppes at present are a fragile ecosystem
  in precarious equilibrium, which will turn into woodland naturally when fully protected. 
  Nine steppe reserve areas have been studied with respect to their floristic diversity
  and ecology. The results here presented include graphic representations of tolerance
  ranges for various ecological parameters of the main classes and alliances of steppe
  vegetation and of a selection of representative species (Stipa spp. and Carex
  humilis). The conclusion is drawn that, whereas every reserve is a unique ecosystem
  requiring its own individual management, as a rule of thumb not more than one quarter of
  the area should be fully protected and the remainder subject to some degree of grazing or
  ploughing. W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Gardens and institutes 
    
 
  
    Maria Lisete CAIXINHAS - Flora da estufa fria de Lisboa. - Verbo,
      Lisboa & São Paulo, 1994 (ISBN 792-22-1541-8). 143 pages, colour photographs and map,
      cloth with dust jacket. 
     
   
  The "estufa fria" in Lisbon is unique among greenhouses in many ways, to
  begin with is extraordinary size of over one hectare. Also, it is not a "house"
  really, being covered by what, judging from the photographs, is only a light thatching of
  lamellate shades. It has been built into a quarry in the midst of the Eduardo VII Park,
  where almost a century ago gardeners started sheltering their more delicate species
  against the northerly winds. The area was first thatched in the twenties, with
  restructuring and enlargement in 1933 and 1947, and is most irregular in outline. Plants
  kept there, though introduced, grow quite naturally, with but little care and without any
  heating, yet flower and often set fruit freely, and many do propagate themselves. The
  Estufa Fria was never thought of as a botanical garden surrogate, and as the photographs
  show labelling is minimal, but Lisbon people take pride in its ingenious build which, with
  a sheer minimum of artefacts, creates a moist and suitably mild climate all the year
  round. 
  There has never before been a guide or published catalogue of the Lisbon greenhouse, in
  spite of the many visitors and frequent use in school class teaching. Lisete Caixinhas has
  now authored a beautifully printed and gorgeously illustrated book with the descriptions
  and colour photographs of 181 species identified by her, alphabetically arranged within
  the four main groups: pteridophytes, gymnosperms, dicots, and monocots. She presents us
  with a colourful bouquet of common ornamentals, e.g. maidenhair ferns and hydrangeas,
  mixed with extreme rarities such as the palm Howea belmoreana from Lord Howe Island
  in the Pacific, almost extinct in the wild. As plant lists are provided for the individual
  flower beds, the book will offer excellent guidance to the visitor, to make up for the
  deficient labelling. 
  We are told that work on the holdings of the two adjacent glasshouses, a temperate
  house for succulents and a tropical hothouse, is well under way. Let us hope that it will
  yield a book or books that are equally enjoyable and instructive as the present one. W.G. 
 
  
    Vasile CRISTEA, FELICIAN MICLE & FLORIN CRI-AN - Le Jardin
      Botanique "Alexandru Borza" (Cluj-Napoca, Roumanie). [L'uomo e l'ambiente, 27.]
      - Università degli Studi, Camerino, 1997. 150 pages, black-and-white illustrations,
      laminated cover. 
     
   
  Once again, Franco Pedrotti has opened the pages of his socio-ecological Camerino
  serial to the presentation of a subject from Rumanian botany, and to Vasile Cristea as an
  author (see OPTIMA Newsletter 31: (17-18). 1997). The subject, this time, is the Botanic
  Garden of the "Babeî-Bolyai" University of Cluj-Napoca. The booklet, written in
  an elegant French whose meaning I assume can sometimes be fully grasped only by those
  fluent in Rumanian, deals for one half with historical aspects and for the second, with a
  description of the Garden itself, its main open-air sectors and greenhouses (6 large
  public ones plus 7 old ones used as nurseries; the photographs of the succulent and
  Mediterranean greenhouse, Nos. 32-33, having been inverted), as well as the botanical
  museum and herbarium. 
  The first, historical part is full of interesting facts and documents but also
  curiously patchy. Some data are well hidden or may be completely missing, such as surface
  area and species number of the Garden (the last edition of the International directory of
  botanical gardens, more explicit, gives such figures: 14 hectares and 10,000 species). One
  finds an abstract of the past of Cluj's academia, and details of the two earlier
  University gardens, the first founded in 1807 at the Reformed College under the impact of
  Cserey, the second initiated by the Society for the Transsylvanian Museum and, after 1872,
  run by the Hungarian University by botanists such as Kanitz and Richter. After World War
  I, when the Rumanian University took the place of the former Hungarian one, the Garden
  moved to its present location under the great Alexander Borza whose name it presently
  carries (since when, again we are not told). There is not even the slightest of hints at
  the existence of a second botanical garden in Cluj-Napoca, at the Institute for Agronomy,
  which is both larger (20 hectares) and older (founded 1903) than the present one! 
  An interesting chapter is the one devoted to the Garden's directors: after Borza who
  was in charge for 28 years until 1947 (including the period of wartime exile of the whole
  institution to Timiîoara when the Hungarian Soó took command in Cluj), there were no
  less than 7 directors, a new one every six years on average. Since 1996 two changes have
  occurred, and the next is imminent. What this may mean in economically difficult times I
  cannot tell, but it seems obvious that our Rumanian colleagues have to fight hard for
  their Garden's survival. Let us wish them good success! W.G. 
 
  
    Emanuil PALAMAREV & Ana PETROVA (ed.) - Bblgarska Akademija na
      Naukite. Institut po Botanika.50 godini. (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. Institute of
      Botany. 50 years.). - Vanjo Nedkov, Sofija, 1997. 74 pages, photographs mostly in
      colour, paper. 
     
   
  When this brochure commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of one of the Balkan's most
  prestigious and active botanical institutions was published, one of its most renowned
  representatives and head of its historically central department had, sadly, just died:
  Stefan Kozuharov, whom many will remember as a friend and scientist alike. Let us take
  this pamphlet, meant as a festive birthday present, as also being a memorial for him and
  his work. 
  Through its fully bilingual (Bulgarian and English) text and its many colour
  photographs, mostly of staff, this publication is a pleasantly informative portrait of the
  Institute of Botany of which, following a general historica outline, it describes the
  departments (Flora and Florogenesis, Phytocoenology and Ecology, Palaeobotany and Pollen
  Analysis, Taxonomy and Ecology of Fungi), Laboratories (Biology and Chemistry of Medicinal
  and Aromatic Plants, Anatomy and Embryology of Plants, Chemotaxonomy and Phytomonitoring),
  and services (Botanical Garden, Library, Herbarium). The stress is on research activities
  and programmes, in which respect the whole Institute, in spite of recent budgetary cuts,
  can show a record to be proud of. Its ongoing activity is much needed in a time when it
  becomes increasingly apparent how little we still know, in actual fact, about one of the
  richest and most critical floras of Europe, that of the Balkan Peninsula. W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Bibliography and
  documentation 
    
 
  
    Alfred HANSEN & Per SUNDING - Botanical bibliography of the
      Canary Islands. [Sommerfeltia supplement, 5]. - Botanical Garden & Museum, Oslo,
      1994 (ISBN 82-7420-023-3). 116 pages, paper. Price: NoK 130. 
     
   
  As any botanical bibliography, the present one (announced with some delay) is of great
  promise. The unequalled experience of the two authors in the field of Macaronesian
  floristics is in itself a guarantee for a high degree of reliability and completeness. By
  consequence, one will hardly be surprised at the great number of items cited, said (I
  didn't try to check!) to be 2738. The coverage is stated in the preface to encompass
  "all disciplines of botany and all plant groups". A special effort has been made
  to include papers on plant substances, at least those that are of some taxonomic
  relevance, whereas physiological papers have apparently hardly been considered. A number
  of entries refer in fact to unpublished works (as is stated for several theses) not to
  bibliographic items in the strict sense, and a few concern articles in newspapers (a
  random selection only, I suppose). Preface matter is scant, and the bibliographic list is
  virtually co-extensive with the whole work. 
  The one main drawback of this bibliography is the absence of any kind of subject index.
  In the era of data-basing, the option of searching by subject ought to be a standard
  feature of any bibliography. But then, obviously, the present literature list is not a
  by-product of an electronic database, having been built and kept as a plain text file.
  This helps explain the absence of standardisation of journal abbreviations and (a
  regrettable trait, as it too easily leads to error and confusion) the generalised use of
  the term "Ibid." to replace repetitive journal titles. 
  When and if, as one hopes, updating of this bibliography is being considered, it would
  be most desirable to transfer all data to a searchable database format, preferably
  available for on-line consultation. W.G. 
 
  Notices of Publication index 
 
   
 
  Symposium proceedings 
    
 
  
    Vernon H. HEYWOOD & Melpo SKOULA (ed.). - Identification of wild
      food and non-food plants of the Mediterranean region. Proceedings of the First Regional
      Workshop of the MEDUSA Network "Identification, Conservation, and Use of Wild Plants
      of the Mediterranean Region" held on 28-29 June 1996 at the Mediterranean Agronomic
      Institute of Chania, Greece. [Cahiers options méditerranéennes, 23]. - Mediterranean
      Agronomic Institute, Chania, 1997. [6] + III + 165 pages, paper. 
     
   
  The 1996 Workshop held in Hania had as its main concrete outcome the set-up of a new
  network on the "identification, conservation and use of wild plants in the
  Mediterranean Region" called MEDUSA (see OPTIMA Newsletter 32: (28). 1997). This
  recent initiative is, obviously, of utmost interest for all botanists working on
  Mediterranean taxa. 
  The Proceedings volume includes papers of two kinds. In the first half, one will find
  brief but informative presentations of some of the major programmes and institutions that
  are playing an active role in the creation and running of MEDUSA. Reading these, one will
  get a rough impression of how complex and intricate the web of players in the field,
  mostly known only by their acronyms, has become. They include, in particular, the
  International Council for Medicinal and Aromatic Plants (ICMAP), Leiden University's
  Ethnosystems & Development programme LEAD, the International Plant Genetic Resources
  Institute's West Asia & North Africa Network (IPGRI-WANANET), and the programme on the
  Development of Integrative Vegetation & Ecosystem Research, Systematic Inventorying,
  Taxonomic Assessment & Surveying (DIVERSITAS). 
  The second, larger half brings contributions from 9 out of 10 of the Mediterranean
  countries initially represented on the MEDUSA Steering Committee: Algeria, Egypt, France,
  Greece, Italy, Morocco, Portugal, Tunisia, and Turkey - Spain being curiously lacking.
  Many bring extensive tabular surveys of the wild flora locally used by man, or of some of
  its components (medicinal plants in particular, and in one case, ornamental trees), among
  which the 17-pages inventory of useful plants from Turkey (the only one to include fungi
  along with vascular plants) is particularly impressive. W.G. 
 
  
    Claudio BINI & Serena MAIANI (ed.). - Salvaguardia delle pinete
      littoranee. Atti, 21-22 ottobre 1993, Grosseto. - Regione Toscana, Firenze, 1995. 183
      pages, graphs, maps, paper. 
     
   
  This volume comprises the proceeding of a conference centred on dieback phenomena in
  the coastal pine woods of Tuscany, a subject discussed in more detail under a simultaneous
  twin publication, item 22 above, where relevant background information can be found. The
  texts of 5 lectures, 11 communications, and the contribution of 22 discussants at a round
  table conference are here included. W.G. 
 
  *Please send all items for review directly to the author of this column:
   
  Prof. Dr. Werner GREUTER,  
  Botanischer Garten und Botanisches Museum Berlin-Dahlem 
  Freie Universität Berlin 
  Königin-Luise-Straße 6-8 
  D-14191 Berlin, Germany. 
  Phone: (+4930) 83006-132 or 8316010, Fax: (+4930) 838-50218 
  E-mail: wg@zedat.fu-berlin.de. 
  Notices of Publication index 
    
   
  
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