| Literature DB >> 22859885 |
Beth Louise Mantle1, John La Salle, Nicole Fisher.
Abstract
Whole-drawer imaging is shown to be an effective tool for rapid digitisation of large insect collections. On-line, Whole-drawer images facilitate more effective collection management, virtual curation, and public engagement. The Whole-drawer imaging experience at the Australian National Insect Collection is discussed, with an explanation of workflow and examples of benefits.Entities:
Keywords: Digitisation; Satscan; Whole-drawer; collections; entomology; imaging
Year: 2012 PMID: 22859885 PMCID: PMC3406473 DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.209.3169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zookeys ISSN: 1313-2970 Impact factor: 1.546
Figure 1.The SatScan imaging system used in ANIC. Shown here with the front cover removed.
Figure 2.Workflow process in ANIC to Digitise whole drawers of insects and load images into Morphbank-ALA
Figure 3.A whole-drawer image displayed in MorphbankALA for online for viewing, editing and download. Image properties: 17,003x16,425 pixels, 30 MB (JPEG), and 464 MB (LZW compressed TIFF).
Figure 4.Whole-drawer image of unsorted Hemiptera specimens with identifications provided by a remotely located expert, Dr Murray Fletcher. This drawer was subsequently re-curated according to the identifications, with specimens accessioned into the appropriate locations within the ANIC Hemiptera collection. See Appendix 1 for full list of remote identifications.
Figure 5.Inset from previous figure (Figure 4). Label data attached to small specimens is often almost completely readable. Therefore, specimen metadata could be extracted and digitised using specialised character recognition software.
Figure 6.Specimen with QR Code containing label data. A smart phone with the appropriate software can read and access the label data for this specimen from the image.
Figure 7.Ultra high-resolution image of Buforaniidae grasshoppers (Orthoptera) from the ANIC. Note that the specimens are arranged by species, and then by the State from which they were collected. In this example, Northern Territory specimens are pinned in the first and second columns, followed by Queensland specimens in columns three and four. The online version of this image is viewable at Morphbank-ALA.
Figure 8.Whole-drawer image of dragonfly specimens used for a pilot study investigating the error associated with direct and indirect measures of morphological characters, such as wing length.
| Rows 1–3 | Large |
| Row 4. | 2 as above, ?, possibly |
| Row 5. | ?, ?, ?, |
| Row 6. | |
| Row 7–10. | all |
| All large Malaysian | |
| Row 1. | 2 × |
| Row 2. | |
| Row 3. | |
| Row 4. | |
| Row 1. | |
| Row 2. | 3 |
| Row 3–6. | all large |
| All large exotic | |
| All large exotic | |
| Row 1. | |
| Row 2. | ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, |
| Row 3. | |
| Row 4. | |
| Row 5. | |
| Row 6. | ?, ?, ? |
| Row 7–9 | lots of little things. Last one in Row 9 might be |
| Row 1. | ?, ?, ? |
| Row 2. | ?, ?, |
| Row 3. | |
| Row 4. | |
| Row 5. | 3 × |
| Row 1. | ?, ?, ?, ?, ? |
| Row 2. | 4 × |
| Row 3. | 5 × |
| Row 4. | ?, |
| Row 5. | 4 × |
| Row 6. | ?, ?, ?, |
| Row 7. | |
| Row 8. | ?, ?, ?, ?, |
| Row 9. | 3 × |
| Rows 1–2. | |
| Row 3. | 2 × |
| Row 4. | 2 × |
| Row 5. | 2 × |
| Row 6. | |
| Row 7. | |
| Row 8. | ? |