Plant Identification

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by Anna Lawrence




  C O N S E R V A T I O N S E R I E S

  plant identification

  CREATING USER-FRIENDLY FIELD GUIDES FOR BIODIVERSITY MANAGEMENT

  ANNA LAWRENCE AND

  WILLIAM HAWTHORNE

  Plant Identification

  PEOPLE AND PLANTS CONSERVATION SERIES

  Series Editor

  Martin Walters

  Series Originator

  Alan Hamilton

  People and Plants is a joint initiative of WWF,

  the United Nations Educational, Scientific

  and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)

  and the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

  Applied Ethnobotany: People, Wild Plant Use and Conservation Anthony B. Cunningham

  Biodiversity and Traditional Knowledge: Equitable Partnerships in Practice Sarah A. Laird (ed)

  Carving Out a Future:

  Forests, Livelihoods and the International Woodcarving Trade Anthony Cunningham, Brian Belcher and Bruce Campbell

  Ethnobotany: A Methods Manual

  Gary J. Martin

  People, Plants and Protected Areas: A Guide to In Situ Management John Tuxill and Gary Paul Nabhan

  Plant Conservation: An Ecosystem Approach

  Alan Hamilton and Patrick Hamilton

  Plant Identification:

  Creating User-Friendly Field Guides for Biodiversity Management Anna Lawrence and William Hawthorne

  Plant Invaders: The Threat to Natural Ecosystems

  Quentin C. B. Cronk and Janice L. Fuller

  Tapping the Green Market:

  Certification and Management of Non-Timber Forest Products Patricia Shanley, Alan R. Pierce, Sarah A. Laird and Abraham Guillén (eds) Uncovering the Hidden Harvest:

  Valuation Methods for Woodland and Forest Resources Bruce M. Campbell and Martin K. Luckert (eds)

  Plant Identification

  Creating User-Friendly Field Guides

  for Biodiversity Management

  Anna Lawrence and William Hawthorne

  London • Sterling, VA

  First published by Earthscan in the UK and USA in 2006

  Copyright © World Wide Fund for Nature, 2006

  The moral right of Anna Lawrence and William Hawthorne to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.

  This publication is an output from a research project funded by the United Kingdom Department for International Development (DFID) for the benefit of developing countries. The views expressed are not necessarily those of DFID. R7475 and R7367 Forestry Research Programme.

  All rights reserved

  ISBN-10: 1-84407-079-4

  ISBN-13: 978-1-84407-079-4

  Typesetting by MapSet Ltd, Gateshead, UK

  Cover design by Yvonne Booth

  Index by Indexing Specialists (UK) Ltd

  Printed and bound in the UK by Bath Press

  For a full list of publications please contact:

  Earthscan

  8–12 Camden High Street

  London, NW1 0JH, UK

  Tel: +44 (0)20 7387 8558

  Fax: +44 (0)20 7387 8998

  Email: [email protected]

  Web: www.earthscan.co.uk

  22883 Quicksilver Drive, Sterling, VA 20166-2012, USA Earthscan is an imprint of James and James (Science Publishers) Ltd and publishes in association with the International Institute for Environment and Development A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Lawrence, Anna.

  Plant identification : creating user-friendly field guides for biodiversity management / Anna Lawrence and William Hawthorne.

  p. cm.

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  ISBN-13: 978-1-84407-079-4

  ISBN-10: 1-84407-079-4

  1. Plants—Identification—Guidebooks. I. Hawthorne, William. II. Title.

  QK97.5.L39 2006

  580—dc22

  2005031809

  Printed on elemental chlorine-free paper

  Contents

  List of plates, figures, tables and boxes

  ix

  List of case studies

  xiii

  People and Plants partners

  xiv

  Acknowledgements

  xv

  1

  Identifying biodiversity: Why do we need field guides?

  1

  Anna Lawrence and William Hawthorne

  Introduction

  1

  How do we ‘know’ nature? Classifying, naming and recognizing 2

  Field guides

  3

  How to use this book

  5

  2

  Producing a successful guide: Principles, purpose, people and process 11

  Anna Lawrence and Patricia Norrish

  What makes a successful guide?

  11

  Purpose

  11

  Principles

  12

  People

  14

  Process

  15

  3

  Planning and budgeting

  23

  Anna Lawrence, Ana Paula Lopes Ferreira, Maria Theresa Stradmann, Israel Vargas, Claudia Jordán, Marcelino Lima, Patricia Norrish, Sarah Gillett and Teonildes Nunes

  Introduction

  23

  Step 1: Identify the needs and purpose of the guide with the stakeholders 24

  Methods for consulting

  34

  Step 2: Review the scope in relation to available resources 41

  Step 3: Prepare an action plan and agreements with stakeholders 53

  Summary: Checklist of questions for the planning stage 56

  4

  Plant names and botanical publication

  61

  William Hawthorne and Stephen Harris

  Introduction

  61

  Naming, identification and classification

  61

  The spectrum of botanical literature

  72

  Landmarks in the spectrum of field guides today

  77

  Your field guide within the spectrum of types

  87

  vi Plant Identification

  5

  Identification: Keys and other access methods

  91

  William Hawthorne

  Introduction

  91

  Types of guide: Types of access

  95

  Choosing access methods and the medium for your field guide 117

  Conclusions

  119

  6

  Plant characters suitable for field guides

  121

  William Hawthorne

  Introduction

  121

  Characters of younger stems and leaves

  126

  Characters of whole plants or plant populations

  138

  Conclusions

  149

  7

  Information: Finding it and presenting it

  151

  Anna Lawrence

  Introduction

  151

  Kinds of information

  151

  Managing information in a database

  152

  Nomenclature

  153

  Selecting, sampling and recording your sources of information 156

  Primary data: Information direct from people

  158

  Secondary sources: Information from existing documented sources 169

  Ownership, intellectual property rights and copyright 173

  Accurac
y and reliability

  174

  Writing

  176

  8

  Illustration 183

  William Hawthorne and Rosemary Wise

  Introduction

  183

  The content of a picture: Some general principles

  183

  The options for illustrative material

  191

  Use of computers for handling illustrations

  204

  Conclusions: Choosing and using imagery

  211

  9

  Testing the field guide

  215

  Anna Lawrence, Pat Norrish, Maria Theresa Stradmann, Israel Vargas, Edwin Magariños, Jorge Costa, Claudia Jordán and Teonildes Nunes Introduction

  215

  Overview of the testing process

  216

  Methodology

  218

  Organizing workshops for testing

  223

  Preparing materials for testing

  229

  Documentation: Instructions and forms for the test

  232

  Using the results of tests and workshops

  234

  Contents vii

  10 Publishing the field guide

  235

  Anna Lawrence

  Introduction

  235

  Choosing a publisher

  236

  Do-it-yourself publication

  237

  Desktop publishing

  238

  Finalizing content

  240

  Printing

  240

  Getting your guide to the users

  242

  Follow-up: Tracking the success of your field guide

  244

  List of acronyms and abbreviations

  249

  References

  251

  Index

  261

  List of plates, figures, tables and boxes PLATES

  The plate section is after the index on page 269

  1

  Copperplate engravings from Hans Sloane’s early guide to Caribbean plants and animals

  2

  Example of a diagrammatic, dichotamous key based on images 3

  A sample of the wide range of tree bole and base forms found in West Africa

  4

  A sample of the wide range of liane wood found in West Africa 5

  Part of the spectrum of bark slashes found in West Africa 6 Colour

  photographic

  Cola leaf guidelets in Cameroon

  7

  Samples of modular photoguides tested in Ghana

  8

  Samples of the photo-cards, paintings and drawings used in format trials in Grenada

  FIGURES

  1.1 A page from the Virtual Field Herbarium website

  6

  2.1 The process of producing a field guide

  16

  2.2 Example of a botanical guide page layout

  19

  3.1 Indigenous villagers in Bajo Paraguá, Bolivian Amazon, prioritize species to include in their guide to useful plants

  40

  4.1 Illustration

  from

  the

  Grete Herbal of 1526, an era when botany had not acquired a great deal of scientific rigour

  62

  5.1 Simple multi-access key to groups based on latex and leaf form 105

  5.2 Screenshot of an e-key in action

  115

  5.3 The evolution of the Australian rainforest key

  116

  6.1 Moderate levels of jargon in a field guide glossary 132

  6.2 Leaf

  venation

  135

  6.3 Distinctive forms of two species of Bombacaceae in West Africa 140

  6.4 A minority of species have crowns that can be illustrated with silhouettes 141

  6.5 Standardizing use of terms for a tree field guide 144

  8.1 Sample guidelet pages from the formats tested in the DFID–FRP

  Field Guide Project for Cameroonian Cola

  185

  8.2 Sample guidelet pages (A5 or A6) tested in the DFID–FRP project for Ghanaian large trees

  186

  x Plant Identification

  8.3 Sample guidelets (A6 cards) with drawings of Grenadian plants, tested in the DFID–FRP project

  187

  8.4 Leaf silhouettes created using a scanner

  190

  8.5 Making an image that can substitute for a line drawing from a digital photograph 202

  8.6 The problem with saving the same compressed JPEG file too often 208

  TABLES

  3.1 Examples of stakeholders who may be involved in producing a field guide 26

  3.2 Options for guides based on the four key aspects 32

  3.3 Comparing different physical designs of guides

  33

  3.4 An example of a calendar from the Fundación Amigos de la Naturaleza (FAN) and the Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT) 46

  3.5 Printing options and associated costs

  51

  3.6 Suggestions for professionals required to produce a field guide 60

  4.1 Floras and field guides: A comparison

  75

  4.2 Regions or countries of high biodiversity and the number of Floras for these areas

  77

  4.3 The spectrum of field guides

  78

  5.1 Various formats of dichotomous or similar keys

  101

  5.2 Dawkins’s primary table

  104

  6.1 Jargon level: How unnecessary is that word or phrase?

  126

  6.2 Definition by various authors of some hair-related terms 127

  6.3 Where to look for and use various classes of character 147

  7.1 Comparing methods for storing data

  154

  7.2 Linking the method and source to the kind of information needed 159

  8.1 The three main categories of illustrative material with their advantages and disadvantages

  192

  8.2 File space required (kilobytes) for different formats and types of image 208

  8.3 Summary of image file formats

  210

  9.1 Some approaches to testing

  220

  9.2 Completed usability form in the case of a specific guide to medicinal plants in Paraíba, Brazil

  224

  10.1 Author objectives and indicators of impact for the eco-tourist guide Biodiversidad del Parque Nacional Noel Kempff Mercado 245

  10.2 Eco-tourist objectives and indicators of impact (as perceived by park guards) for the eco-tourist guide Biodiversidad del Parque Nacional Noel Kempff Mercado

  246

  BOXES

  1.1 The Virtual Field Herbarium (VFH)

  6

  1.2 Learning by doing: Field guides in five countries 7

  2.1 Adapting product to purpose and people: Some examples of the principles in action

  17

  List of plates, figures, tables and boxes xi 3.1 Identifying the stakeholders

  25

  3.2 A workshop to plan a field guide with stakeholders 36

  3.3 Participatory brainstorming methods for species selection 39

  3.4 Checklist of costs

  49

  4.1 Types of non-scientific names

  63

  4.2 Scientific species, binomials, infra-specific names and authors 66

  4.3 The importance and method of collecting herbarium specimens 67

  4.4 Vegetative and fertile characters, and sterile specimens 68

  4.5 Synonyms and why scientific names keep changing

  71

  4.6 Checklists

  74

  4.7 Herbals and the evolution of plant field guides

  76

  4.8 Geographical coverage of field guides

  77

  4.9 ‘Pragmatic Flora’
and other technical field guides 83

  4.10 ‘Field monographs’: Detailed field guides for small groups of plants 84

  4.11 Concise, semi-technical guides

  85

  4.12 Generic overview field guides and student texts

  86

  4.13 Field guides to incomplete sets of species

  87

  4.14 Leucaena genetic resources handbook

  90

  5.1 Automatic

  identification

  91

  5.2 Do you know how you recognize common objects?

  92

  5.3 Characters

  93

  5.4 General criteria for a useful set of diagnostic characters 94

  5.5 Types of static guide and typical associated access methods 96

  5.6 Orthodox and customized species sequences for nature order guides 98

  5.7 Can picture-based guides be accurate in species-rich places?

  100

  5.8 Dawkins’s

  Graphical Field Keys of Uganda Trees two-dimensional multilevel table

  104

  5.9 Efficient key characters for a given point in a key 107

  5.10 Cards with punched holes and/or other information 110

  5.11 Main types of dynamic format guides

  111

  5.12 Modular guides: An efficient solution to the biodiversity identification bottleneck?

  112

  5.13 Dynamic field guides from databases

  113

  5.14 Word processor files, Acrobat PDF files and indexes 114

  5.15 Experiments on the value of interactivity in keys 115

  6.1 Field characters and classical characters

  122

  6.2 An unfortunate diversity of jargon for classical characters 122

  6.3 Other reviews of field characters for tropical forests 123

  6.4 Issues with simple and compound leaves

  129

  6.5 Seedling

  guides

  129

  6.6 What exactly is egg-shaped?

  131

  6.7 Defining and analysing leaf shapes in databases

  133

  6.8 Smells and tastes

  137

  6.9 Habit categories in The Woody Plants of Western African Forests 139

  6.10 Bark flakes or scales?

  145

  7.1 Principles of database design

  155

  xii Plant Identification

  7.2 BRAHMS and Alice: examples of software to create your own botanical databases

  157

  7.3 Guidance on conducting interviews

  160

  7.4 How to collect information using a questionnaire 161

  7.5 Visual participatory methods

  170

  7.6 How to assess information that you find on the internet 172

  7.7 Existing botanical databases that can help with name checking and known uses, distribution and conservation status

  173

  7.8 Criteria for trustworthiness

  176

  7.9 Advice on writing well

  178

  8.1 Depicting

  scale

 

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