09e90dfb-5b1b-4dd9-a796-e2fba53d26f0 http://data.canadensys.net/ipt/resource?r=rare_inventory Inventory and BioBlitz Records from rare Charitable Research Reserve Angela Telfer Centre for Biodiversity Genomics Data Management Lead - Bio-Inventory and Collections
50 Stone Road East Guelph Ontario N1G 2W1 CA
atelfer@uoguelph.ca
Jeremy deWaard Centre for Biodiversity Genomics Director of Bio-Inventory and Collections
50 Stone Road East Guelph Ontario N1G 2W1 CA
dewaardj@uoguelph.ca
Jeremy deWaard Centre for Biodiversity Genomics Director of Bio-Inventory and Collections
50 Stone Road East Guelph Ontario N1G 2W1 CA
dewaardj@uoguelph.ca owner
Angela Telfer Centre for Biodiversity Genomics Data Management Lead - Bio-Inventory and Collections
50 Stone Road East Guelph Ontario N1G 2W1 CA
atelfer@uoguelph.ca contentProvider
Centre for Biodiversity Genomics publisher 2016-12-21 eng In 2015, the Centre for Biodiversity Genomics, formerly Biodiversity Institute of Ontario, and the rare Charitable Research Reserve partnered to inventory species present on the rare property in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada. Inventory efforts were largely passive, using malaise and pitfall traps to target mainly Arthropoda specimens over a period of four months (May to August 2015). In addition, on August 16, 2015, international and local experts joined together for a BioBlitz in the research reserve to document taxa from a variety of major groups including invertebrates, vertebrates, plants, fungi and lichens. The resulting specimen and observation records are released to the public here. BIOUG Centre for Biodiversity Genomics Biodiversity Institute of Ontario University of Guelph Canadensys Canada observation specimen barcode bioblitz n/a Occurrence GBIF Dataset Type Vocabulary: http://rs.gbif.org/vocabulary/gbif/dataset_type.xml All data included in this release are publicly available on the Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD; www.boldsystems.org). Each specimen is also linked to a COI DNA barcode which is being submitted to GenBank at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/). To the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the Public Domain (CC0 1.0). Users may copy, modify, distribute and use the work, including for commercial purposes, without restriction. Area surveyed was property of the rare Charitable Research Reserve in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada. -80.37 -80.3 43.38 43.36 2015-05-01 2015-08-17 All specimens were identified to the lowest taxonomic level possible with a combination of morphological examination and DNA barcode analysis. phylum Arthropoda kingdom Plantae kingdom Fungi To increase the species inventory for rare, a DNA-Barcoding BioBlitz was planned to coincide with the 6th International Barcode of Life Conference. This event combined the utility of DNA barcoding for discriminating between species and the knowledge base of taxonomic experts to contribute to a comprehensive species inventory. unkown Jeremy deWaard Centre for Biodiversity Genomics Director of Bio-Inventory and Collections
50 Stone Road East Guelph Ontario N1G 2W1 CA
dewaardj@uoguelph.ca
See sampling description and quality control. Samples were collected from the rare Charitable Research Reserve beginning May 1, 2015 and concluding by 2 AM Monday, August 17, 2015. Malaise traps were deployed in May 2015 and passively collected samples for 4 months. Pitfall traps in the vicinity of the malaise traps were deployed at the same time and checked once weekly. For the weeks of May 25-31 and July 6-12 2015, standardized sampling procedures developed by the Biodiversity Institute of Ontario were employed for three different sites at rare. Standardized sampling collection efforts include 20 pitfall traps, 10 pan traps, 3 soil samples for berlese funnels, 1 intercept trap and 1 malaise trap. The remainder of collection efforts are described in a publication detailing the short-term collection and the BioBlitz, "Biodiversity inventories in high gear: DNA barcoding facilitates a rapid biotic survey of a temperate nature reserve". Traps were revisited for servicing according to a schedule, which varied according to the needs of the trap. All specimens are visible on BOLD (www.boldsystems.org). Through comparison with other specimens using their DNA barcode sequences, contaminated specimens and misidentifications were discovered and fixed. Biodiversity inventories in high gear: DNA barcoding facilitates a rapid biotic survey of a temperate nature reserve Jeremy deWaard principalInvestigator National Science and Engineering Research Council (NSERC), Genome Canada, Ontario Genomics Institute, Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation, the Canadian Foundation for Innovation, and the McCain/Evans Foundation. The rare Charitable Research Reserve is a 900+ acre stretch of land where Northern Hardwood meets Carolinian forest. It is located in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada. It also hosts the confluence of two local rivers, the Speed and Grand Rivers. The land is a trust dedicated to conservation, research and education. The short-term collection effort in conjunction with the BioBlitz event were aimed at increase knowledge of species in the rare Charitable Research Reserve, utilizing DNA barcoding and specialist expertise.
2015-08-12T05:22:15.754-04:00 dataset Centre for Biodiversity Genomics (BIOUG) from University of Guelph. http://dx.doi.org/10.5886/hh6td9jn (accessed on [date]). Canadensys explorer UTF-8 HTML http://data.canadensys.net/explorer/en/resources/rare_inventory GBIF data portal UTF-8 HTML http://www.gbif.org/dataset/09e90dfb-5b1b-4dd9-a796-e2fba53d26f0 http://data.canadensys.net/ipt/logo.do?r=rare_inventory Centre for Biodiversity Genomics BIOUG rare Charitable Research Reserve Inventory pinned 09e90dfb-5b1b-4dd9-a796-e2fba53d26f0/v8.2.xml