Unlocking diverse herbarium specimen associated data to accelerate biodiversity and evolutionary research

This collaboration will increase access to herbarium-derived biodiversity data by creating tools to capture, analyse, and share herbarium specimen associated data.

Biodiversity data, such as those that accompany museum and herbarium specimens, comprise a massive global data resource. This data can be used for rapid biodiversity analyses and to inform conservation and policy decision making. To do this it needs to be accessible within an integrated biodiversity infrastructure, that retains links among spatial, trait, and evolutionary data for taxa.

This project will provide tools to support efficient mobilisation of high-quality specimen associated primary (e.g. taxon, location) and secondary (e.g. molecular) biodiversity data. It will generate a pipeline for collation and phylogenetic analyses of molecular data generated by University of Melbourne researchers and students. It will also create an online phylogenetic browser to enable exploration of native Australian plant and algal evolutionary trees. This will be hosted on the University of Melbourne Herbarium Collection Online for access by students, researchers, and the global public.

Who's involved

Chief Investigator: Dr Jo BirchSchool of Biosciences, Faculty of Science

MDAP Collaboration Leads: Robert Turnbull and Karen Thompson

Collaborators: MDAP, the Faculty of Science, and Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria