News Articles

Published: 03-13-2018
Sand Food (Pholisma sonorae) Photo courtesy of Michael Carters In the deep, drifting sands of the Algodones Dunes of the American Southwest and the El Gran Desierto of northern Mexico lives a curious plant known as Sand Food. To most, Pholisma sonorae looks more like a mushroom than a perennial plant as it is only visible from April to June when its mushroom-shaped inflorescence...
Published: 02-09-2018
Pacarana (Dinomys branickii) David F. Schmidt, USNM Dinomys branickii, Smithsonian Institution, NMNH, Mammals   The Pacarana (Dinomys branickii) is a large species of rodent native to South America. It is the only living member of the family Dinomyidae. Dinomyids were more diverse in the past, with around eight fossil genera known. The Pacarana ranges from Colombia to Bolivia and...
Published: 02-09-2018
From the Tropics to the Drawer and Back: Digitized New World Swallowtail Butterfly Specimens Inform Biodiversity Patterns   Contributed by: Hannah Owens from the Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida As a postdoc at the Florida Museum of Natural History, I am using data from museum specimens to understand why swallowtail butterfly diversity increases as one...
Published: 12-13-2017
Dear iDigBio Enthusiasts, iDigBio is halfway through its seventh year and has many exciting plans for 2018. Moving forward, we will continue working with the collections community to facilitate digitization, mobilization, and use of specimen data, while continuing to enhance the data search portal. iDigBio’s priorities are to work with additional collections to increase digitization...
Published: 12-12-2017
New Insights from Old Herbarium Specimens Contributed by Richard B. Primack (Boston University; primack@bu.edu) and Charles G. Willis (Harvard University; charleswillis@fas.harvard.edu) “Live in each season as it passes - breathe the air, drink the drink, taste the fruit & resign yourself to the influence of each.”  Thoreau, in his Journal. 1835 Millions of...
Published: 11-30-2017
by Deborah Paul, Libby Ellwood, Christina Alba, Larry Page      with contributions from our speakers: Dave Tazik, Jennifer McGuire, Anna Monfils, Barry Sinervo, and Elizabeth Martin; and from some participants present at this symposium including (at least): Vince Smith, Mary Klein, Herrick Brown, and Jason Knouft ‘What do we need to leave behind today to position...
Published: 11-21-2017
by Deborah Paul, Ana Dal Molin, and Pam Soltis, with contributions from all symposium presenters. Symposium from iDigBio and Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, Brazil   Overview. Big Data. There are a few different definitions for what constitutes big data. Most involve enormous datasets. But one could easily argue that research datasets are big when you, as an...
Published: 11-17-2017
The third annual WeDigBio (Worldwide Engagement for Digitizing Biocollections) Event took place October 19-22, 2017. WeDigBio is a citizen science event that involves the public in working towards two main goals – to mobilize biodiversity specimen information from collections around the world, and to grow, strengthen and educate our biodiversity community. Specimen information is...
Published: 11-09-2017
The seventh annual ADBC Summit was held on November 2-3, 2017, in Gainesville at the UF Cultural Plaza. The location was chosen in part to celebrate the Florida Museum’s 100th anniversary as the state’s official natural history museum. The annual Summit brings together representatives from Thematic Collections Networks (TCNs), Partners to Existing Networks (PENs), the National...
Published: 10-18-2017
Prologue: Many of us in the ADBC world look for ways to expand the community of users of museum collections data and to increase the ways in which collections data are used. Recently, in Trends in Ecology and Evolution (TrEE), an opinion piece was published by Scott A. Morrison, et al. titled "Equipping the 22nd-Century Historical Ecologist." In this paper, Morrison, et al. envision...

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