Occurrence and distribution of spores producing plants in Tanzania: Collection of Preserved Specimens at TAFORI herbarium
Citation
Sawe T (2023). Occurrence and distribution of spores producing plants in Tanzania: Collection of Preserved Specimens at TAFORI herbarium. TanBIF. Occurrence dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/urxwjq accessed via GBIF.org on 2024-12-15.Description
This dataset contains taxonomic information of spore producing plants (Pteridophytes) specimens which are preserved at Tanzania Forestry Research Institute herbarium in Lushoto.Sampling Description
Study Extent
Specimen preserved at Lushoto Silviculture Research Center comes from all regions of Tanzania.Sampling
Data presented in this data set were collected during implementation of various research projects in Tanzania. Plant materials were collected and pressed in the field, dried, identified and mounted on sheet bearing detailed labels, preserved and fixed into folders, then stored in cabinet’s cardboards systematically and sequentially (Alexiades, 1996). Every sheet of specimens contains standard information for herbarium collections, including; taxonomic identification, locality information, geographical coordinates, collector information, and ecological data. In addition, the specimens have been treated to prevent pests damage.Method steps
- The information on the specimen labels was our data source. To digitize each specimen, we followed three steps: data capture, data cleaning, and data publication. In the data capture process, we extracted all the information on the specimen’s label, and we input the information into Microsoft Excel spreadsheets using Darwin-Core format. In this process, we grouped the specimen information into specific categories of Darwin Core data standards. We used “GEOlocate” (https://www.geo-locate.org/default.html) to acquire the coordinates of the specimens lacking geographical coordinates. We obtained the coordinates by geo-referencing the name of the village or location written on the preserved specimen. Afterwards, we conducted data cleaning to ensure data consistency and adherence to Darwin Core standards. We mainly used “data validator” tool available under GBIF website (https://www.gbif.org/tools/data-validator) to identify missing or incorrect information in our data set. To verify the taxonomic nomenclature, we used “species matching” tool available under GBIF website (https://www.gbif.org/tools/species-lookup), the Plant list (http://www.theplantlist.org/), and World flora Online (http://www.worldfloraonline.org/). All the tools we used are open-source software or available as an open online platform.
Taxonomic Coverages
The dataset has 21 families whereby Aspleniaceae (25.6%), Pteridaceae (18.8%) and Polypodiaceae (9.3%) are the dominant.
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Pteridophytescommon name: Pteridophytes
Geographic Coverages
Data presented in this dataset were collected in different location in Tanzania
Bibliographic Citations
Contacts
Thomas Saweoriginator
position: Research officer
Tanzania Forestry Research Institute
TZ
email: tcorodius87@gmail.com
Thomas Sawe
metadata author
email: tcorodius87@gmail.com
Thomas Sawe
user
email: tcorodius87@gmail.com
Thomas Sawe
administrative point of contact
position: Research officer
Tanzania Forestry Research Institute
TZ
email: tcorodius87@gmail.com