| Literature DB >> 29033655 |
Roosmarijn Steeman1, Wouter Vanreusel1, Rutger Barendse2, Filip Verloove3, Nico Wysmantel4, Walter Van den Bussche4, Thomas Gyselinck4, Pieter Hendrickx5, Arnout Zwaenepoel1, Pierre Van Vooren5, Steven Jacobs6, Peter Desmet7, Karin Gielen1, Marc Herremans1, Kristijn R R Swinnen1,8.
Abstract
Waarnemingen.be - Plant occurrences in Flanders and the Brussels Capital Region, Belgium is a species occurrence dataset published by Natuurpunt. The dataset contains almost 1.2 million plant occurrences of 1,222 native vascular plant species, mostly recorded by volunteers (citizen scientists), mainly since 2008. The occurrences are derived from the database http://www.waarnemingen.be, hosted by Stichting Natuurinformatie and managed by the nature conservation NGO Natuurpunt. Together with the datasets Florabank1 (Van Landuyt and Brosens 2017) and the Belgian IFBL (Instituut voor Floristiek van België en Luxemburg) Flora Checklists (Van Landuyt and Noé 2015), the dataset represents the most complete overview of indigenous plants in Flanders and the Brussels Capital Region.Entities:
Keywords: citizen science; distribution; native; observation; waarnemingen.be
Year: 2017 PMID: 29033655 PMCID: PMC5624210 DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.85.14925
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PhytoKeys ISSN: 1314-2003 Impact factor: 1.635
Figure 1.The number of observations per plant species (excluding subspecies, varieties, forms, hybrids and multispecies).
Top 10 of the most frequently recorded plant species in www.waarnemingen.be.
| Scientific name | Number of observations |
|---|---|
|
| 8687 |
|
| 8446 |
|
| 7741 |
|
| 7695 |
|
| 7438 |
|
| 7024 |
|
| 7010 |
|
| 6902 |
|
| 6863 |
|
| 6830 |
Figure 2.Location of Belgium within Europe (left) and the three administrative regions in Belgium (yellow = Flanders, black = Brussels Capital Region, red = Wallonia)
Figure 3.4 × 4 km2 IFBL grid cells in Flanders and the Brussels capital region.
Figure 4.Left: the number of plant observations per IFBL grid cell. Red (1–200), orange (201–500), yellow (501–1000), light blue (1001–2000) and dark blue (2001–14000). Right: the number of plant species (subspecies, varieties, forms, hybrids and multispecies not included) per IFBL grid cell. Red (1–150), orange (151–300), yellow (301–450) and blue (451–600). The two white IFBL grid cells in the west of Flanders are locations without plant observations.
Figure 5.Known distribution based on the data from www.waarnemingen.be of true plant species (subspecies, varieties, forms, hybrids and multispecies not included) based on the number of IFBL grid cells with observation of this species.
Top 10 of plant species registered in the most IFBL grid cells.
| Scientific name | Number of IFBL grid cells |
|---|---|
|
| 790 |
|
| 777 |
|
| 772 |
|
| 765 |
|
| 765 |
|
| 762 |
|
| 743 |
|
| 740 |
|
| 739 |
|
| 736 |
Figure 6.Number of collected records between 1855 and 2000 (left) and between 2001 and 2016 (right). Each number on the left x-axis is a period of 10 year (e.g., 1910 = 1901–1910, etc.). Note the difference between the scales on the y-axis between the left and right figures and the strong increase in smartphone registration of records since the launch of an app (ObsMapp for Android) in 2012.
Figure 7.Frequency distribution of observers per number of observations (left) or species (right). Note the difference between the x-axis in the left and right y-axis.