Title: Divisional Presentation Template
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Australian Plant Census A collaborative project
to develop an agreed national list of Australian
plant taxa.
2Why an Australian Plant Census?
- Identified need for an agreed enumeration of
Australian vascular plants by the botanical
community - Lack of modern census. Existing Census of
Australian Vascular Plants (Hnatiuk 1990) now
significantly outdated - Consistency of data across national projects,
especially Australias Virtual Herbarium (AVH)
project - Similar need recognised by land managers and
policy makers (i.e. Dept. of Environment and
Heritage (DEH)) - Environmental legislation
- Land management
- Policy development and decision making
3Christmas Bush
4Changing taxonomic concepts
Different interpretations of species in
Subseries Dichromophloiosae of the genus Corymbia
5umbonata
dichromophloia
6 7State concepts
8What is the APC ?
- A collaborative project of the Australian
botanical community through the Council of Heads
of Australian Herbaria (CHAH) - to arrive at an agreed national list of
Australian plant taxa - based on and documented in the Australian Plant
Name Index database (APNI) - representing a consensus view of Australian
vascular flora for the purposes of communication
at a national level. - The content of the APC is based on the latest
published taxonomic accounts, assessed against
current regional and taxonomic expert opinion.
9Australian Plant CensusIntroduction
- Proposed enumeration should
- Have general acceptance by the Australian
botanical community - Be a consensus view of the Australian vascular
flora at national level for national purposes - Have extensive synonymy
- Cross reference to alternative taxonomic views
- A national endorsed taxonomic view of
Australian vascular plants, accounting for
alternative taxonomies
10What is the basis of the APC?
- Collaborative and shared product
- Based on published and/or on-line electronic
resources and current state of knowledge - Flexible and dynamic, reflecting new taxonomies
as published - Alternative taxonomies reflected in synonymies
comments - Initial focus was on taxa of conservation
significance - Commonwealth Environment Protection and
Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act - corresponding State / Territory Acts
- Later phases on families as treated for Flora of
Australia
11Management
- DEH is the initial primary client for the
Australian Plant Census (APC) - CHAH is the collective custodian of taxonomic
knowledge on which the Australian Plant Census is
based, and the overall authority for content and
project management - ANH/CPBR is custodian of the Australian Plant
Name Index (APNI) data set, and manages the
project on behalf of CHAH
12APC Working Group
- CHAH working group composed of taxonomic
representatives from each herbarium - Collaborative
- Responsive
- Consult colleagues
- Project Officer works under direction of APNI
team in collaboration with the CHAH Working Group
13CHAH Working Group
- Role of CHAH Working Group
- Act as representative for their respective
State/Territory - Provide data and information from respective
censuses - Respond to requests for information or
consideration of taxonomic issues requested by
the Project Officer - Work with Project Officer to develop agreed
taxonomy and nomenclature - Provide feedback and recommendations to State and
Territory authorities
14Procedural sequence
Compilation of data by Project Officer APNI Team
Contributors Experts, Census compilers, Working
Group members, Project Officer
Evaluation of data by Project Officer Working
Group
Agreed taxonomy
Differing taxonomy
Project Officer informs CHAH there is no
controversy
Project Officer prepares case for CHAH to
consider in consultation with WG
CHAH approves
DEH projects Other users
Australian Plant Census In APNI with
synonymy, alternative taxonomy and relevant
commentary
CHAH decides on a national taxonomy
15Agreed taxonomy
- Grevillea
- 583 taxa, 1291 names
- Treatment largely follows Makinson, Fl. Australia
17A (2000) - Accepted by Working Group without amendment,
endorsed by CHAH - Lythraceae
- 39 taxa, 106 names
- Treatment follows Hewson Beesley, Fl. Australia
18 (1990) and Lepschi, Nuytsia,13 (2000) - Accepted by Working Group without amendment,
endorsed by CHAH
16Differing taxonomy
- Phalaenopsis amabilis subsp. rosenstromii or P.
rosenstromii? - Differing taxonomies adopted by different
herbaria - Species rank of Clements, Aust. Orchid Research
(1989) vs Subspecific rank of Christenson,
Phalaenopsis A monograph (2001) - Cases for adopting either concept prepared by
relevant specialists, submitted to Working Group
for consideration - Working Group votes in favour of species-level
rank for this taxon - Working Group recommendation considered and
endorsed by CHAH
17Changing circumscription name remains same
conservation status may change
- Calectasia cyanea
- Name widely misapplied to number of species now
recognised as distinct - Recent research ? narrow circumscription
- Species occurs only in sw WA
- Populations now assigned to other species
- Recommendation re EPBC listing listing of C.
cyanea remains appropriate, and conservation
status should be reviewed - EPBC listing of some taxa formerly included in C.
cyanea should also be considered - Working Group recommendation considered and
endorsed by CHAH
18Differing taxonomy
- Ptychosperma bleeseri
- Previously treated as a rare species from NT
- Recent research shows this to be conspecific with
widespread P. macarthurii - Recommended to DEH that the listing of this
species be reviewed and the taxon delisted - In fact this palm is considered to be of
cultivated origin..
19Outcome of review of EPBC taxon No change to listed name or taxon Taxonomic and/or nomenclatural changes to listed name Taxonomic and/or nomenclatural changes to listed name Taxonomic and nomenclatural changes to listed name Taxonomic circumscription changed, but name remains unchanged Taxonomic status changed
Interpretation No taxonomic or nomenclatural changes have been made to the listed taxon 1. Nomenclatural change to listed name, but taxon circumscription remains unchanged, i.e. where nomenclature has been changed, but the circumscription ( concept) of the listed taxon remains the same 2. Taxonomic and/or nomenclatural changes to listed name essentially similar, but refers to instances where taxonomic changes have affected nomenclature, but the concept of the taxon concerned is still the same Taxonomic changes not only affect the nomenclature of a listed taxon, but also the circumscription or concept of the entity involved Concept where taxon has been altered, but the name remains unchanged. This may be the result of a name being widely misapplied, often to a more widespread taxon, or an already rare taxon being subdivided further Taxa now considered to be of hybrid origin
Recommendn for EPBC taxa No amendment to EPBC listing required EPBC listed name should be reviewed EPBC listed name should be reviewed EPBC listing conservation status should be reviewed Conservation status should be reviewed EPBC listing should be reviewed
No. of taxa (total 1332) 1180 106 106 35 6 4
Examples Darwinia carnea Grevillea christineae Tetratheca aphylla Darwinia chapmania, Diuris basaltica Spyridium sp. Little Desert Danthonia popinensis Eucalyptus xanthope Pultenaea parrisiae subsp. elusa. Euc. benthamii Spyridium microphyllum Ptychosperma bleeseri Calectasia cyanea Prasophyllum correctum Pultenaea glabra. Eucalyptus bennettiae
20Matching phrase, manuscript and misapplied names
- Acacia sp. Barklys (J.L.Egan 124) NT Herbarium
sensu CHAH (2006) -
- Acacia citriodora Tindale D.Keith MS
- Acacia sp. E
- Acacia sp. G
- Acacia sp. G Kimberley Flora (C.H.Gittins 1260)
NSW Herbarium - Acacia arida auct. non Benth. Pedley, L.
1964, Proc.Roy. Soc. Queensland. 75 34. - Acacia hilliana auct. non Maiden Pedley, L.
1978, Austrobaileya. 1(2) 134-135. - WA, NT, Qld
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22Sample output
Ficus saxophila Blume sensu Du Puy, D.J.
Telford, I.R.H. (1993). ChI Ficus saxophila
var. sublanceolata (Miq.) Corner Ficus virens
Aiton Ficus scabrifolia A.Rich. Ficus coronata
Spin Colla Ficus scandens var. australis
F.M.Bailey Ficus pantoniana King var.
pantoniana Ficus scandens var. australis
F.M.Bailey Ficus pantoniana King Ficus scobina
Benth. sensu CHAH (2005). Previous records of
this species from WA (e.g. Flora of Kimberley)
are in error and represent Ficus aculeata var.
orbicularis. NT Ficus semicostata F.M.Bailey
Ficus racemosa L.
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25Progress to date
- c.9400 taxa ( c.28,370 names) considered by
Working Group and endorsed by CHAH - Data for approximately 60 is entered/edited in
APNI and available via APC web query - Taxa treated to date include
- those listed under EPBC legislation
- taxa of conservation significance listed at the
State/Territory level - all families published in Flora of Australia,
including Casuarinaceae, Combretaceae, Moraceae,
Proteaceae, Thymelaeaceae and Urticaceae
26Output available at http//www.chah.gov.au/apc/
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29Completing the project
Genera Species Infra-species Synonyms Total names
EPBC taxa Stage 1, State lists Apr 2005-Jul 06 N/A 1289 107 1401 2797
Total Stages 23 Jul 2005-Jun 06 1004 9371 2080 15915 28370
Est. total Stage 4 (Jul-Dec 2006) 540 4862 1341 5266 12009
Totals Apr 2005-Dec 06 1544 15522 3528 22582 43176
30Future directions and issues
- Continue present taxon-based approach,
concentrating on unpublished Flora of Australia
volumes, supplemented by DEH priorities - Explore means of maintaining APC beyond initial
two year DEH funding - Foster current levels of enthusiasm and
commitment from Working Group members and CHAH - Expansion of APC capabilities (e.g. linking to
State/Territory censuses, images, additional data
sets)
31Future directions and issues
- Secure further funding to complete data entry to
APNI, e.g. industry, philanthropic trusts - Annotated mapping of state censuses and floras to
APC and vice versa, so that APC is linked to the
AVH - Potential support from NCRIS
32Outcomes
- Scientifically defensible and appropriate
information provided for legislative purposes - Close collaboration between CHAH members
- National agreement to produce national census
- Agreed methodology, and its working
- APNI development
- Standardisation of informal (phrase) names
- Standarisation of taxon names across the country
- Increased taxonomic knowledge
- Highlighting resolution of taxonomic problems in
flora - Encourage publication of many undescribed species
33Australian Plant Census
- APC output available at
- http//www.chah.gov.au/apc/
- APNI available at
- http//www.anbg.gov.au/apni/