Barcodes are Dead, Long Live Barcodes!

Improving the Inventory of Living Plant Collections Using Optical Technology

Authors

  • Reinout Havinga Hortus Botanicus Amsterdam
  • Havard Ostgaard Botanical Software Ltd.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24823/Sibbaldia.2016.196

Abstract

The use of barcodes for record keeping in botanic gardens has been pioneered before, but attempts have not always been successful. It has even been claimed that, for use in living collections, barcodes are altogether obsolete. This is difficult to imagine given the success of barcodes in almost any professional logistic or auto-ID application. We have tried to find the ‘sweet spots’ of barcode use and have implemented the technology at the Hortus Botanicus Amsterdam. Integrated with the list-making functionality in the collection management software, barcodes have proved to be an invaluable tool in improving the quality and accuracy of the inventory.

Author Biographies

  • Reinout Havinga, Hortus Botanicus Amsterdam
    Curator
  • Havard Ostgaard, Botanical Software Ltd.
    Manager and Software Engineer

References

APLIN, D., VANDERBORGHT, T., GROOM, Q., VAN DE VYVER, A., LEYMAN, V. & EMPAIN, A. (2007). The use of barcodes beyond the supermarket: possibilities and challenges for living collections. Proceedings of the 3rd Global Botanic Gardens Congress. Available at www.bgci.org/files/Wuhan/PapersConserving/Aplin.pdf (accessed April 2016).

BLADES, L., HARPER, G., HELFER, S., LEE, M.L., ROGERS, L. & STEWART, S. (2008). Rapid-survey methods for flowering phenology. Sibbaldia, 6, 163–179.

JEBB, M. (2003). Cataloguing and Record Keeping for Plant Collections. PlantNetwork Meeting at the National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin, Dublin. Available at http://plantnetwork.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/5072/records.pdf (accessed April 2016).

KHUSHI, M., CARPENTER, J., BALLEINE, R., & CLARKE, C. (2012). Development of a Data Entry Auditing Protocol and Quality Assurance for a Tissue Bank Database. Cell and Tissue Banking, 13, 9–13. Available at http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10561-011-9240-x (accessed April 2016).

LATTA, J. (2007). The use of hand held tablet laptops to record living collections. Sibbaldia, 5, 43–49.

LEADLAY, E. & GREENE, J. (eds) (1998). The Darwin Technical Manual for Botanic Gardens. Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI), London.

MARTIN, S. (2014). Climate ready? Exploring the impacts and lessons from recent extreme events at Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh for climate change adaptation in the horticultural sector. Sibbaldia, 12, 155–170.

PERSOON, J.G.M., GOUDA, E.J. & OTTER, J. (2004). Atlantis-BG a standard for comprehensive, web-based collection management. Proceedings of the 2nd Global Botanic Gardens Congress. Available at www.bgci.org/barcelona04/abstracts/pdf_abstracts/persoon.pdf (accessed April 2016).

RAE, D. (2008). The value of living collection catalogues and catalogues produced from the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Sibbaldia 6, 115–131.

RUSTAN, Ø. & OSTGAARD, H. (2010–2016). IrisBG – Botanical Garden Collection Management, version 3 (software). Botanical Software Ltd, Bath. Available at www.irisbg.com

RUSTAN, Ø. & OSTGAARD, H. (2012). IrisBG – Botanical Garden Collection Management, version 3.1.0.12011 (software). Botanical Software Ltd, Bath.

WIKIPEDIA (2016). Reed-Solomon error correction. Available at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed%E2%80%93Solomon_error_correction (accessed April 2016).

Downloads

Published

2017-01-17

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Barcodes are Dead, Long Live Barcodes! : Improving the Inventory of Living Plant Collections Using Optical Technology. (2017). Sibbaldia: The International Journal of Botanic Garden Horticulture, 14, 133-140. https://doi.org/10.24823/Sibbaldia.2016.196