A New Approach to Targeting Verifications at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

Authors

  • Robert Cubey Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh
  • Martin F Gardner Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24823/Sibbaldia.2003.90

Abstract

Verification is the process of identifying and accurately naming the plants in the Living Collections. The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) has had a well organised system for verifying plants in place for many years but, despite this, only 26% of the Living Collections has been verified. The process is slow and time consuming and is biased towards groups and geographical areas in which Garden staff have a research interest. In the last two years, however, a new, more targeted approach to verification, to run in tandem with the existing system, has been developed that is more timeefficient. With this approach herbarium material is collected for each accession and the whole group is verified in one intensive session. Trial runs have been conducted on Alnus and Acer to great effect and further tests are being conducted on Mahonia and Spiraea.

Author Biographies

  • Robert Cubey, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh
    Robert Cubey is the Plant Records Officer at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh
  • Martin F Gardner, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh
    Martin Gardner is Co-ordinator of the International Conifer Conservation Programme, based at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

References

GOVIER et al (2001). Catalogue of Plants 2001. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh.

THOMAS & WATSON. (2000). Royal Botanic Garden Data Management for Plant Collections — A Handbook of Best Practice. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

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How to Cite

A New Approach to Targeting Verifications at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. (2003). Sibbaldia: The International Journal of Botanic Garden Horticulture, 1, 19-23. https://doi.org/10.24823/Sibbaldia.2003.90