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Great New Database
- To: prairie@mallorn.com
- Subject: Great New Database
- From: L*@aol.com
- Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2000 14:05:47 EDT
>>
As described below, the ABI/Heritage web site 'NatureServe' is now publicly
available at <www.natureserve.org>; this includes classification,
distribution, and global, national, and state/province element rank
information, to extent determined and available, for the full vascular flora
(native and non-native) of the United States and Canada (generally following
Kartesz classification), as well as information on animals, natural
communities, and selected lichens and bryophytes. Updates are planned three
times a year. Larry Morse, North American Botanist, TNC & ABI.
New NatureServe(r) Website Launched
NatureServe, a new "online encylopedia of life" developed by the Association
for Biodiversity Information (ABI), is now available to the public on the
Internet at www.natureserve.org. NatureServe provides authoritative
conservation information in a searchable database for more than 50,000
plants, animals, and ecological communities of the United States and Canada.
Science magazine (Sept. 22, 2000) describes NatureServe as "a 25-year trove
of field data on the plants and animals of the United States and Canada. The
NatureServe database holds information on over 50,000 species, from humpback
whale to eastern hemlock, including endangered status, distribution, life
history, and references."
NatureServe will be a valuable resource for conservationists, students and
teachers, academic researchers, land managers and environmental planners, and
anyone interested in learning about the plants and animals of the U.S. and
Canada.
In-depth information on rare and endangered species NatureServe provides the
most comprehensive, in-depth information on rare and
endangered species currently available, and includes extensive information on
common plants and animals too.
The leading source for ecological communities NatureServe is the first
searchable Internet database for the ecological communities of the U.S. and
Canada.
Learn what exists, where it's found, and how rare it is NatureServe's
colorful distribution maps show where each species and ecological community
occurs, plus how rare or common it is across its range.
Which plants and animals are rare or imperiled in your state? What species
are legally protected? Answering these questions and more, NatureServe
details the life history and habitat requirements of thousands of species,
the threats they face, and management strategies for their protection.
A partnership among ABI, the Natural Heritage Network, and The Nature
Conservancy NatureServe makes data from U.S. Natural Heritage programs and
Canadian conservation data centres easily accessible to the public for the
first time-representing a quarter-century of field work, ecological
inventory, and scientific database development by a network of hundreds of
botanists, zoologists, ecologists, and data managers.
What's Included * Vascular plants: all native North American species,
subspecies, and varieties (more than 25,000).
* Vertebrates: all native North American species and subspecies of mammals,
birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fishes (nearly 5,500).
* Invertebrates: native North American species and subspecies tracked by the
Natural Heritage Network, including comprehensive coverage for freshwater
mussels, crayfishes, butterflies and skippers, underwing moths, tiger
beetles, stoneflies, dragonflies and damselflies, and freshwater snails (more
than 13,000 in all).
* Non-vascular plants: selected native North American species including
lichens, mosses, liverworts, hornworts, and some fungi.
* Ecological communities: all documented communities in the U.S. and Canada
(more than 4,500).
* Non-native species: all established non-native vascular plants and
selected non-native animals.
Sample Questions that NatureServe Can Answer NatureServe's easily searchable
database can quickly provide the answers to individual data requests, such
as:
* What mammals are found in my state? Which of them live only in my state?
Which of them are endangered or threatened?
* How many U.S. orchids are rare or endangered? What is threatening such
rare plants as the eastern prairie white-fringed orchid? Where is it found?
What are its habitat requirements and protection needs?
* What species of birds are found in Nova Scotia? Which of those are also
found in Florida?
* How many native species are extinct or missing in Hawaii? In the entire
United States? How many of them are fishes? Where did each one previously
occur?
To learn these things and more, visit NatureServe on the web at
www.natureserve.org.
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