Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-trophic Associations: Difference between revisions

From iDigBio
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(37 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Category:TCN]]
[[Category:TCN]]
= Digitization TCN: Collaborative Research: Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-Trophic Associations  =
== Digitization TCN: Collaborative Research: Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-Trophic Associations  ==


== Project Summary  ==
{| class="wikitable" style="float:right; margin-left: 10px;"
! colspan="2" style="background:#D58B28;width:200px;font-size:10pt" | Tri-Trophic TCN
|-
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center;font-size:7pt" | [[File:TTD.png|center|300px]]
|-
!colspan="2" style="background:#D58B28;text-align:center;font-size:9pt" | Quick Links
|-
|[[Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-trophic Associations#Project Summary|Project Summary]]
|-
|[[Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-trophic Associations#Current Research|Current Research]]
|-
|[[Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-trophic Associations#Project Websites & Social Media|Project Websites]]
|-
|[https://www.idigbio.org/content/digitization-tcn-collaborative-research-plants-herbivores-and-parasitoids-model-system-study Network Map]
|-
|[[Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-trophic Associations#Publications|Publications]]
|}
 
=== Project Summary  ===


For up-to-date information and the Tri-Tropic blog please see our [http://tcn.amnh.org/ project website].  
For up-to-date information and the Tri-Tropic blog please see our [http://tcn.amnh.org/ project website].  
Line 8: Line 26:
All the nearly 20,000 plant species in North America are attacked by insect pests, including those in the group Hemiptera (known as the “true bugs”), which are in turn attacked by parasitoid insects in the Hymenoptera (sawflies, wasps, ants), widely used for biological control of agricultural pests. This project will unify some eight million records in 34 collections to answer how the distributions and phenologies of the plants, pests and parasitoids relate to each other, in a Tri-Trophic Databasing and imaging project – the TTD. Data from this approach will benefit basic scientific questions and practical applications in the agricultural sciences, conservation biology, ecosystem studies and climate change and biogeography research. Technological tools and methods will be introduced to graduate students, affiliated universities, and grant-sponsored students from other institutions through a short course. A data-mining and species-distribution modeling symposium at the University of California-Riverside will foster interactions between systematics and ecological researchers, and explore the TTD as a platform for instruction and inquiry.
All the nearly 20,000 plant species in North America are attacked by insect pests, including those in the group Hemiptera (known as the “true bugs”), which are in turn attacked by parasitoid insects in the Hymenoptera (sawflies, wasps, ants), widely used for biological control of agricultural pests. This project will unify some eight million records in 34 collections to answer how the distributions and phenologies of the plants, pests and parasitoids relate to each other, in a Tri-Trophic Databasing and imaging project – the TTD. Data from this approach will benefit basic scientific questions and practical applications in the agricultural sciences, conservation biology, ecosystem studies and climate change and biogeography research. Technological tools and methods will be introduced to graduate students, affiliated universities, and grant-sponsored students from other institutions through a short course. A data-mining and species-distribution modeling symposium at the University of California-Riverside will foster interactions between systematics and ecological researchers, and explore the TTD as a platform for instruction and inquiry.


== Current Research  ==
=== Current Research  ===
 
Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-trophic Associations  
Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-trophic Associations  
Primary Institutions: American Museum of Natural History & New York Botanical Garden
Primary Institutions: American Museum of Natural History & New York Botanical Garden
Line 16: Line 35:
A few recent highlights include:
A few recent highlights include:


1. Many newly digitized records! TTD had approximately 1,151,424 newly transformed insect records and 1,325,086 plant images completed as of June, 2015. <br>
# Many newly digitized records! TTD had approximately 1,151,424 newly transformed insect records and 1,325,086 plant images completed as of June, 2015. <br>
2. Dissemination of information through attendance at iDigBio workshops, meetings, and two articles in the recent ZooKeys special issue, No Specimen Left Behind (http://www.pensoft.net/journals/zookeys/issue/209/). <br>
# Dissemination of information through attendance at iDigBio workshops, meetings, and two articles in the recent ZooKeys special issue, No Specimen Left Behind (http://www.pensoft.net/journals/zookeys/issue/209/). <br>
3. An intensive, research focused, specimen level biodiversity informatics short course was held in 2013. <br>
# An intensive, research focused, specimen level biodiversity informatics short course was held in 2013. <br>
4. Many supervised volunteers are utilized at participating institutions (particularly the NYBG and AMNH) for georeferencing and data collection. <br>
# Numerous volunteers increased georeferencing and databasing productivity at participating institutions, particularly at the NYBG and AMNH. <br>
5. The TTD at AMNH is offering a Research Experience for Undergraduates fall 2014 (http://research.amnh.org/physsci/reu.html).  <br>
# The TTD at AMNH is offering a Research Experience for Undergraduates in Summer 2014 to Jeremy Frank, who is now an incoming Richard Gilder Graduate Student [http://www.amnh.org/our-research/richard-gilder-graduate-school/news].  <br>
6. DiscoverLife, one of the TTD partners, has developed a host interaction public portal (http://www.discoverlife.org/tttcn/) and a series of highly sophisticated locality cleaning and matching services for the project.  <br>
# DiscoverLife, one of the TTD partners, had developed a host interaction public portal (http://www.discoverlife.org/tttcn/) and a series of sophisticated locality cleaning and matching services for the project.  <br>
7. One of our AMNH digitizers won an EOL Rubenstein Fellow (http://eol.org/info/52) to pursue her interest in altitude specificity in floral coloration. <br>  
# One of our AMNH digitizers received an EOL Rubenstein Fellow (http://eol.org/info/52) to pursue her interest in altitude specificity in floral coloration. <br>  
8. The principle software for capturing host – insect –parasitoid data from natural history collections, Arthropod Easy Data Capture, has been open-sourced (http://sourceforge.net/projects/arthropodeasy/).
# The principal software for capturing host – insect –parasitoid data from natural history collections, Arthropod Easy Data Capture, has been open-sourced (http://sourceforge.net/projects/arthropodeasy/).
 
 
== Publications ==
1. Deitz, L. L. & Wallace, M. S.. "Richness of the Nearctic treehopper fauna (Hemiptera: Aetalionidae and Membracidae.," Zootaxa, v.3426, 2012, p. 1-26.
 
2. Kennedy, Ashley C. and Charles R. Bartlett. "Systematics of Caenodelphax Fennah (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Dephacidae) and Description of the New Genus Flavoclypeus.," Transactions of the American Entomological Society, v.140, 2014, p. 17-65.
 
3. Bartlett, C. R., L. B. O?Brien and S. W. Wilson. "A review of the planthoppers (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea) of the United States," Memoirs of the American Entomological Society, v.50, 2014.
 
4. Ellwood, E.R., Dunckel, B., Flemons, P., Guralnick, R., Nelson, G., Newman, G., Newman, S., Paul, D., Riccardi, G., Rios, N., Seltmann, K.C., and Mast, A.R.. "Accelerating Digitization of Biodiversity Research Specimens through Online Public Participation," BioScience, v.65, 2015.
 
5. Bartlett, C. R. and G. Kunz.. "A new genus and species of delphacid planthopper (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) from Central America with a preliminary regional species list.," Zootaxa, v.3946, 2015.
 
6. Wright, C.M. & Seltmann, K.C.. "Color Representation of Blue Flowers by Encyclopedia of Life Content Providers," Biodiversity Data Journal, v.e1143, 2014.
 
7. Melissa Tulig, Nicole Tarnowsky, Michael Bevans, Anthony Kirchgessner, and Barbara M. Thiers 1. "Increasing the Efficiency of Digitization Workflows for Herbarium Specimens.," ZooKeys, v.209, 2012.
 
8. Randall Schuh. "Integrating Specimen Databases and Revisionary Systematics," ZooKeys, v.209, 2012.
 
9. Schuh, R. T.. "Integrating specimen databases and
revisionary systematics.," Zookeys, v.209, 2012, p. 255?267.
 
10. Deitz, L. L., and M. S. Wallace. "Richness of the Nearctic Treehopper Fauna (Hemiptera: Aetalionidae and Membracidae).," Zootaxa, v.3423, 2012.
 
11. Bartlett, C. R. and M. D. Webb. "The planthopper genus Spartidelphax, a new segregate of Nearctic Delphacodes (Hemiptera, Delphacidae)," ZooKeys, v.453, 2014.
 
12. Bartlett, C. R.. "New species of the planthopper genus Parkana (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) from Mesoamerica," Transactions of the American Entomological Society, v.140, 2014.
 
13. Wheeler, A. G., jr. and C. R. Bartlett. "Megamelanus bicolor Ball (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae): a specialist planthopper on saltgrass (Distichlis spicata; Poaceae) in Nebraska?s saline wetlands," Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, v.117, 2015.
 
14. Bartlett, C. R., S. W. Wilson and D. S. Sikes. "First New World Record of Paradelphacodes paludosus (Flor 1861) (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea : Delphacidae) in Alaska," Entomological News, v.124, 2015.
 
15. Tulig, M., Tarnowsky, N., Bevans, M.
Kirchgessner, A., & Thiers. B. M.. "No specimen left behind: mass digitization of natural history collections.," Zookeys, v.209, 2012, p. 103-113.
 
16. Kennedy, Ashley C. & C.R. Bartlett. "Systematics of Caenodelphax Fennah (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Dephacidae)
and Description of the New Genus Flavoclypeus.," Transactions American Entomological Society, v.140, 2013.


== Project Leadership  ==
=== Project Websites & Social Media ===


''Project Sponsor:'' AMNH
[http://tcn.amnh.org/ <b>Tri-trophic TCN Website</b> http://tcn.amnh.org]<br>


''Principal Investigator (PI):''Randall T. Schuh, American Museum of Natural History  
Facebook: [https://www.facebook.com/pages/Insects-Plants-and-Parasites-Digitizing-Natural-History-Collections/330373400373054 Insects-Plants-and-Parasites-Digitizing-Natural-History-Collections]


''Collaborating Award PIs:'' Christine Johnson, American Museum of Natural History; Richard Rabeler, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Charles Bartlett, University of Delaware; Robert Naczi, New York Botanical Garden; Melissa Tulig, New York Botanical Garden; Robert Magill, Missouri Botanical Garden; John Heraty, University of California, Riverside; Christiane Weirauch, University of California, Riverside; Benjamin Normark, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
=== Citizen Science & Outreach Projects ===


== NSF Award Number ==
=== Project Leadership  ===
''Project Sponsor:'' American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) [http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1115080 (NSF Award 1115080)]


[http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1115080&HistoricalAwards=false 1115080]
''Principal Investigator (PI):''Randall T. Schuh, American Museum of Natural History;  (co-PI): Christine Johnson, American Museum of Natural History


== Project Websites  ==
''Collaborating Award PIs:''<br> Richard Rabeler, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Charles Bartlett, University of Delaware; Robert Naczi, New York Botanical Garden; Melissa Tulig, New York Botanical Garden; Robert Magill, Missouri Botanical Garden; John Heraty, University of California, Riverside; Christiane Weirauch, University of California, Riverside; Benjamin Normark, University of Massachusetts, Amherst


http://tcn.amnh.org/
=== Project Collaborators  ===


== Collaborators Map  ==
[https://www.idigbio.org/content/digitization-tcn-collaborative-research-plants-herbivores-and-parasitoids-model-system-study Map of Collaborating Institutions]
https://www.idigbio.org/content/digitization-tcn-collaborative-research-plants-herbivores-and-parasitoids-model-system-study


== Project Collaborators  ==
Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum<br>
Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum<br>
California Academy of Sciences<br>
California Academy of Sciences<br>
Line 92: Line 73:
Miami University<br>
Miami University<br>
Mississippi State University<br>
Mississippi State University<br>
Missouri Botanical Garden<br>
Missouri Botanical Garden [http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1115115 (NSF Award 1115115)]<br>
New York Botanical Garden<br>
New York Botanical Garden [http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1115103 (NSF Award 1115103)]<br>
North Carolina State University<br>
North Carolina State University<br>
Staten Island Museum of Natural History <br>
Oregon State University<br>
Oregon State University<br>
Texas A&M University<br>
Texas A&M University<br>
University of California – Berkeley<br>
University of California – Berkeley<br>
University of California – Riverside<br>
University of California – Riverside [http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1115144 (NSF Award 1115144)]<br>
University of Colorado<br>
University of Colorado, Museum of Natural History<br>
University of Delaware<br>
University of Delaware [http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1115103 (NSF Award 1115103)]<br>
University of Georgia<br>
University of Georgia<br>
University of Illinois, Illinois Natural History Survey<br>
University of Illinois, Illinois Natural History Survey<br>
Line 107: Line 87:
University of Kentucky<br>
University of Kentucky<br>
University of Maine<br>
University of Maine<br>
University of Massachusetts<br>
University of Massachusetts [http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1115191 (NSF Award 1115191)]<br>
University of Michigan<br>
University of Michigan [http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1115081 (NSF Award 1115081)]<br>
University of Minnesota, Bell Museum of Natural History<br>
University of Minnesota, Bell Museum of Natural History<br>
University of Texas<br>
University of Texas<br>
University of Wisconsin – Madison<br>
University of Wisconsin – Madison<br>


== Data Contributors ==
<b>Unfunded Contributors</b>:<br>
Academy of Natural Sciences, Drexel<br>
Canadian National Collection, Ottawa<br>
Consortium of Pacific Northwest Herbaria<br>
Consortium of Pacific Northwest Herbaria<br>
Consortium of California Herbaria<br>
Consortium of California Herbaria<br>
Drexel University, Academy of Natural Sciences<br>
Florida State Collection of Arthropods<br>
Florida State Collection of Arthropods<br>
Kansas State University<br>
Staten Island Institute of Arts and Sciences/Staten Island Museum - Entomology<br>
Staten Island Institute of Arts and Sciences / Staten Island Museum - Entomology<br>
Southwest Biodiversity Consortium<br>
Southwest Biodiversity Consortium<br>
University of California, Davis<br>
 
=== Protocols & Workflows ===
 
=== Publications ===
 
# Bartlett, C. R., Dos Passos, E. M., Da Silva, F. G., Diniz, L. E. C., & Dollet, M. A new species of Oecleus Stål (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Cixiidae) from coconut in Brazil. Embrapa Tabuleiros Costeiros-Artigo em periódico indexado (ALICE). 2019<br>
# Bartlett, C. R. A New Genus and Species of Delphacidae (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) from Costa Rica. Zootaxa, 4657(2), 361-368. 2019<br>
# Bartlett, C. R., & Kennedy, A. C. A review of New World Malaxa (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae). Zootaxa, 4441(3), 511-528. 2018.
# Barringer, L., & Bartlett, C. R. Pennsylvania planthoppers (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Fulgoroidea): relative abundance and incidental catch using novel trapping methods.Insecta Mundi (0661,1-31). 2018.
# Leavengood Jr, J. M., Bartlett, C. R., & Vitanza-Hedman, S. First reports of six Planthoppers (Hemiptera: ''Fulgoroidea: Tagosodes, Delphacodes, Pareuidella, Nilaparvata, Asarcopus, Bruchomorpha'') in Texas. Entomological News, 127(3), 215-229. 2017.
# Hardy, N. B., Peterson, D. A., & Normark, B. B. Nonadaptive radiation: Pervasive diet specialization by drift in scale insects?. Evolution, 70(10), 2421-2428. 2016.
# Peterson, D. A., Hardy, N. B., & Normark, B. B. Micro-and macroevolutionary trade-offs in plant-feeding insects. The American Naturalist, 188(6), 640-650.2016.
#Llano, C. A., Bartlett, C. R., & Guevara, G. First record of the subfamily Asiracinae and Copicerus irroratus (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Delphacidae) in Colombia. Florida Entomologist, 99(1), 120-122. 2016.
# Gnezdilov, V. M., Bartlett, C. R., & Bourgoin, T. A new tribe of Tropiduchidae (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea) with revision of the genus Buca and description of asymmetric hind leg spinulation. Florida Entomologist, 99, 406-416. 2016. <br>
# Wheeler Jr, A. G., Hoebeke, E. R., & Bartlett, C. R. Juncus effusus (Juncaceae) as a Host Plant of Nothodelphax occlusa (Van Duzee)(Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) in the Pacific Northwest. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, v118, 629-635, 2016.<br>
# Bartlett, C. R. No Kelisia Fieber (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) in South America: New Taxonomic Placement Of Phrictopyga Vittata (Muir) Comb. Nov. from Brazil. Entomological News, v.125, 2015.<br>
# Peterson, D. A, N. B. Hardy, G. E. Morse, I. C. Stocks, A. Okusu, and B. B. Normark. Phylogenetic analysis reveals positive correlations between adaptations to diverse hosts in a group of pathogen-like herbivores. Evolution, v.69, 2015.<br>
# Hardy, N. B, D. A. Peterson, and B. B. Normark. Scale insect host ranges are broader in the tropics. Biology letters, 11, 2015. <br>
# Bartlett, C. R. and G. Kunz.. "A new genus and species of delphacid planthopper (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) from Central America with a preliminary regional species list.," Zootaxa, v.3946, 2015.<br>
# Bartlett, C. R., S. W. Wilson, and D. S. Sikes. "First New World Record of ''Paradelphacodes paludosus'' (Flor 1861) (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea : Delphacidae) in Alaska," Entomological News, v.124, 2015.<br>
# Ellwood, E.R., B. Dunckel, P. Flemons, R. Guralnick, G. Nelson, G. Newman, S. Newman, D. Paul, G. Riccardi, N. Rios, K. C. Seltmann, and A.R. Mast. "Accelerating Digitization of Biodiversity Research Specimens through Online Public Participation," BioScience, v.65, 2015.
# Wheeler, A. G., Jr. and C. R. Bartlett. "''Megamelanus bicolor'' Ball (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae): a specialist planthopper on saltgrass (Distichlis spicata; Poaceae) in Nebraska's saline wetlands," Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, v.117, 2015.
# Bartlett, C. R.. "New species of the planthopper genus ''Parkana'' (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) from Mesoamerica," Transactions of the American Entomological Society, v.140, 2014.
# Bartlett, C. R., L. B. O'Brien, and S. W. Wilson. "A review of the planthoppers (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea) of the United States," Memoirs of the American Entomological Society, v.50, 2014.
# Bartlett, C. R. and M. D. Webb. "The planthopper genus ''Spartidelphax'', a new segregate of Nearctic Delphacodes (Hemiptera, Delphacidae)," ZooKeys, v.453, 2014.
# Kennedy, A. C. and C. R. Bartlett. "Systematics of ''Caenodelphax'' Fennah (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Dephacidae) and Description of the New Genus Flavoclypeus.," Transactions of the American Entomological Society, v.140, p. 17-65, 2014.
# Wright, C. M. & K.C. Seltmann. "Color Representation of Blue Flowers by Encyclopedia of Life Content Providers," Biodiversity Data Journal, v.e1143, 2014.
#Chordas III, S. W., & Blinn, R. L. Seven black bug species (Thyreocoridae) new for North Carolina, USA. Entomological News, 124(1), 57-63. 2014.
# Wallace, M. S. The host plants of the Telamonini treehoppers (Hemiptera: Membracidae: Smiliinae) and the first diagnoses of nymphs for 14 species. Zootaxa, 3878(2), 146-166. 2014.
# Schuh, R."Integrating Specimen Databases and Revisionary Systematics," ZooKeys, v.209, 2012.
# Tulig,M., N. Tarnowsky, M. Bevans, A. Kirchgessner, and B. M. Thiers. "Increasing the Efficiency of Digitization Workflows for Herbarium Specimens.," ZooKeys, v.209, 2012.
 
=== Professional Presentations ===
[https://vimeo.com/151444049 iDigBio Summit V, 2015]<br>
 
=== Other project documentation ===

Latest revision as of 11:32, 19 September 2019

Digitization TCN: Collaborative Research: Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-Trophic Associations

Tri-Trophic TCN
TTD.png
Quick Links
Project Summary
Current Research
Project Websites
Network Map
Publications

Project Summary

For up-to-date information and the Tri-Tropic blog please see our project website.

All the nearly 20,000 plant species in North America are attacked by insect pests, including those in the group Hemiptera (known as the “true bugs”), which are in turn attacked by parasitoid insects in the Hymenoptera (sawflies, wasps, ants), widely used for biological control of agricultural pests. This project will unify some eight million records in 34 collections to answer how the distributions and phenologies of the plants, pests and parasitoids relate to each other, in a Tri-Trophic Databasing and imaging project – the TTD. Data from this approach will benefit basic scientific questions and practical applications in the agricultural sciences, conservation biology, ecosystem studies and climate change and biogeography research. Technological tools and methods will be introduced to graduate students, affiliated universities, and grant-sponsored students from other institutions through a short course. A data-mining and species-distribution modeling symposium at the University of California-Riverside will foster interactions between systematics and ecological researchers, and explore the TTD as a platform for instruction and inquiry.

Current Research

Plants, Herbivores, and Parasitoids: A Model System for the Study of Tri-trophic Associations Primary Institutions: American Museum of Natural History & New York Botanical Garden Website: http://tcn.amnh.org/ All the nearly 20,000 plant species in North America are attacked by insect pests, including those in the group Hemiptera (known as the “true bugs”), which are in turn attacked by parasitoid insects in the Hymenoptera (sawflies, wasps, ants), widely used for biological control of agricultural pests. This project will unify some three million records in 34 collections to answer how the distributions and phenologies of the plants, pests and parasitoids relate to each other, in a Tri-Trophic Databasing and imaging project – the TTD. Data from this approach will benefit basic scientific questions and practical applications in the agricultural sciences, conservation biology, ecosystem studies and climate change and biogeography research.

A few recent highlights include:

  1. Many newly digitized records! TTD had approximately 1,151,424 newly transformed insect records and 1,325,086 plant images completed as of June, 2015.
  2. Dissemination of information through attendance at iDigBio workshops, meetings, and two articles in the recent ZooKeys special issue, No Specimen Left Behind (http://www.pensoft.net/journals/zookeys/issue/209/).
  3. An intensive, research focused, specimen level biodiversity informatics short course was held in 2013.
  4. Numerous volunteers increased georeferencing and databasing productivity at participating institutions, particularly at the NYBG and AMNH.
  5. The TTD at AMNH is offering a Research Experience for Undergraduates in Summer 2014 to Jeremy Frank, who is now an incoming Richard Gilder Graduate Student [1].
  6. DiscoverLife, one of the TTD partners, had developed a host interaction public portal (http://www.discoverlife.org/tttcn/) and a series of sophisticated locality cleaning and matching services for the project.
  7. One of our AMNH digitizers received an EOL Rubenstein Fellow (http://eol.org/info/52) to pursue her interest in altitude specificity in floral coloration.
  8. The principal software for capturing host – insect –parasitoid data from natural history collections, Arthropod Easy Data Capture, has been open-sourced (http://sourceforge.net/projects/arthropodeasy/).

Project Websites & Social Media

Tri-trophic TCN Website http://tcn.amnh.org

Facebook: Insects-Plants-and-Parasites-Digitizing-Natural-History-Collections

Citizen Science & Outreach Projects

Project Leadership

Project Sponsor: American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) (NSF Award 1115080)

Principal Investigator (PI):Randall T. Schuh, American Museum of Natural History; (co-PI): Christine Johnson, American Museum of Natural History

Collaborating Award PIs:
Richard Rabeler, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Charles Bartlett, University of Delaware; Robert Naczi, New York Botanical Garden; Melissa Tulig, New York Botanical Garden; Robert Magill, Missouri Botanical Garden; John Heraty, University of California, Riverside; Christiane Weirauch, University of California, Riverside; Benjamin Normark, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Project Collaborators

Map of Collaborating Institutions

Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum
California Academy of Sciences
California Department of Food and Agriculture
Carnegie Museum of Natural History
Colorado State University
Cornell University
Eastern Michigan University
Iowa State University
Miami University
Mississippi State University
Missouri Botanical Garden (NSF Award 1115115)
New York Botanical Garden (NSF Award 1115103)
North Carolina State University
Oregon State University
Texas A&M University
University of California – Berkeley
University of California – Riverside (NSF Award 1115144)
University of Colorado, Museum of Natural History
University of Delaware (NSF Award 1115103)
University of Georgia
University of Illinois, Illinois Natural History Survey
University of Kansas
University of Kentucky
University of Maine
University of Massachusetts (NSF Award 1115191)
University of Michigan (NSF Award 1115081)
University of Minnesota, Bell Museum of Natural History
University of Texas
University of Wisconsin – Madison

Unfunded Contributors:
Consortium of Pacific Northwest Herbaria
Consortium of California Herbaria
Drexel University, Academy of Natural Sciences
Florida State Collection of Arthropods
Staten Island Institute of Arts and Sciences/Staten Island Museum - Entomology
Southwest Biodiversity Consortium

Protocols & Workflows

Publications

  1. Bartlett, C. R., Dos Passos, E. M., Da Silva, F. G., Diniz, L. E. C., & Dollet, M. A new species of Oecleus Stål (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Cixiidae) from coconut in Brazil. Embrapa Tabuleiros Costeiros-Artigo em periódico indexado (ALICE). 2019
  2. Bartlett, C. R. A New Genus and Species of Delphacidae (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) from Costa Rica. Zootaxa, 4657(2), 361-368. 2019
  3. Bartlett, C. R., & Kennedy, A. C. A review of New World Malaxa (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae). Zootaxa, 4441(3), 511-528. 2018.
  4. Barringer, L., & Bartlett, C. R. Pennsylvania planthoppers (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Fulgoroidea): relative abundance and incidental catch using novel trapping methods.Insecta Mundi (0661,1-31). 2018.
  5. Leavengood Jr, J. M., Bartlett, C. R., & Vitanza-Hedman, S. First reports of six Planthoppers (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Tagosodes, Delphacodes, Pareuidella, Nilaparvata, Asarcopus, Bruchomorpha) in Texas. Entomological News, 127(3), 215-229. 2017.
  6. Hardy, N. B., Peterson, D. A., & Normark, B. B. Nonadaptive radiation: Pervasive diet specialization by drift in scale insects?. Evolution, 70(10), 2421-2428. 2016.
  7. Peterson, D. A., Hardy, N. B., & Normark, B. B. Micro-and macroevolutionary trade-offs in plant-feeding insects. The American Naturalist, 188(6), 640-650.2016.
  8. Llano, C. A., Bartlett, C. R., & Guevara, G. First record of the subfamily Asiracinae and Copicerus irroratus (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Delphacidae) in Colombia. Florida Entomologist, 99(1), 120-122. 2016.
  9. Gnezdilov, V. M., Bartlett, C. R., & Bourgoin, T. A new tribe of Tropiduchidae (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea) with revision of the genus Buca and description of asymmetric hind leg spinulation. Florida Entomologist, 99, 406-416. 2016.
  10. Wheeler Jr, A. G., Hoebeke, E. R., & Bartlett, C. R. Juncus effusus (Juncaceae) as a Host Plant of Nothodelphax occlusa (Van Duzee)(Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) in the Pacific Northwest. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, v118, 629-635, 2016.
  11. Bartlett, C. R. No Kelisia Fieber (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) in South America: New Taxonomic Placement Of Phrictopyga Vittata (Muir) Comb. Nov. from Brazil. Entomological News, v.125, 2015.
  12. Peterson, D. A, N. B. Hardy, G. E. Morse, I. C. Stocks, A. Okusu, and B. B. Normark. Phylogenetic analysis reveals positive correlations between adaptations to diverse hosts in a group of pathogen-like herbivores. Evolution, v.69, 2015.
  13. Hardy, N. B, D. A. Peterson, and B. B. Normark. Scale insect host ranges are broader in the tropics. Biology letters, 11, 2015.
  14. Bartlett, C. R. and G. Kunz.. "A new genus and species of delphacid planthopper (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) from Central America with a preliminary regional species list.," Zootaxa, v.3946, 2015.
  15. Bartlett, C. R., S. W. Wilson, and D. S. Sikes. "First New World Record of Paradelphacodes paludosus (Flor 1861) (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea : Delphacidae) in Alaska," Entomological News, v.124, 2015.
  16. Ellwood, E.R., B. Dunckel, P. Flemons, R. Guralnick, G. Nelson, G. Newman, S. Newman, D. Paul, G. Riccardi, N. Rios, K. C. Seltmann, and A.R. Mast. "Accelerating Digitization of Biodiversity Research Specimens through Online Public Participation," BioScience, v.65, 2015.
  17. Wheeler, A. G., Jr. and C. R. Bartlett. "Megamelanus bicolor Ball (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae): a specialist planthopper on saltgrass (Distichlis spicata; Poaceae) in Nebraska's saline wetlands," Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, v.117, 2015.
  18. Bartlett, C. R.. "New species of the planthopper genus Parkana (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Delphacidae) from Mesoamerica," Transactions of the American Entomological Society, v.140, 2014.
  19. Bartlett, C. R., L. B. O'Brien, and S. W. Wilson. "A review of the planthoppers (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea) of the United States," Memoirs of the American Entomological Society, v.50, 2014.
  20. Bartlett, C. R. and M. D. Webb. "The planthopper genus Spartidelphax, a new segregate of Nearctic Delphacodes (Hemiptera, Delphacidae)," ZooKeys, v.453, 2014.
  21. Kennedy, A. C. and C. R. Bartlett. "Systematics of Caenodelphax Fennah (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Dephacidae) and Description of the New Genus Flavoclypeus.," Transactions of the American Entomological Society, v.140, p. 17-65, 2014.
  22. Wright, C. M. & K.C. Seltmann. "Color Representation of Blue Flowers by Encyclopedia of Life Content Providers," Biodiversity Data Journal, v.e1143, 2014.
  23. Chordas III, S. W., & Blinn, R. L. Seven black bug species (Thyreocoridae) new for North Carolina, USA. Entomological News, 124(1), 57-63. 2014.
  24. Wallace, M. S. The host plants of the Telamonini treehoppers (Hemiptera: Membracidae: Smiliinae) and the first diagnoses of nymphs for 14 species. Zootaxa, 3878(2), 146-166. 2014.
  25. Schuh, R."Integrating Specimen Databases and Revisionary Systematics," ZooKeys, v.209, 2012.
  26. Tulig,M., N. Tarnowsky, M. Bevans, A. Kirchgessner, and B. M. Thiers. "Increasing the Efficiency of Digitization Workflows for Herbarium Specimens.," ZooKeys, v.209, 2012.

Professional Presentations

iDigBio Summit V, 2015

Other project documentation