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Newsbytes
General Newsbytes
BioMap Diary
BioMap Directive Committee
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June-July 2003: 8,286 specimens from La Salle, Bogotá.
June-Sept.: 400 specimens from Warsaw Museum, Poland.
July: 325 specimens from Distrital University in Bogotá.
July: data gathered at the Genoa, Turin and Milan Museums in Italy:
c.200 specimens in Genoa, 300 hummingbird specimens (mounted) in
Turin and 230 in Milan.
July-Nov.: 1300 specimens from Bonn Museum, Germany.
August 7-12: IV Field Course on Techniques for Monitoring Terrestrial
Birds held in Jardin, Antioquia. 50 participants graduated with
BioMap support.
Aug: 549 specimens from Antioquia University, Medellín.
Aug: Conference on BioMap, collections importance and management
given at the Antioquia University.
Aug: 1,362 specimens from Michigan University Museum.
Aug: systematization of Swiss museums: 2,800 specimens in Genoa,
160 in Bern and 260 in Neuchatel.
Aug-Sept.: 495 specimens from State of Michigan Museum
Sept: 3,436 specimens from San José Museum in Medellín.
Sept.: 158 specimens from Yarumos EcoPark, Manizales.
Sept.: Systematization of 30,000 Colombian bird specimens held
at the Smithsonian in Washington DC, commenced.
Oct-Nov: 5,000 specimens from Valle University in Cali.
Sept. 29-30 - Oct. 1: BioMap participation in the National Ecology
Meeting at the Javeriana University in Bogotá.
Sept.-Oct: 2,600 specimens from the Paris Museum, France.
Oct. 5-11: BioMap participation at the VII Neotropical Ornithological
Congress held in Chile.
Oct. 10-12: BioMap participated in the 3rd European Bird Collections
Conference held in Leiden, Holland
Nov.: BioMap participation at the XVIII National Ornithological
Meeting in Jardín, Antioquia, Colombia, with BioMap poster
and presentation provided.
Nov.: 100 specimens at the Cleveland Museum compiled.
Nov.: 3,500 specimens from California Uni Mus., Berkeley.
Nov.: 90 specimens at the California Academy of Sciences in San
Francisco, USA compiled.
Nov.: 5,500 specimens from Los Angeles County Museum.
Nov: 1500 specimens from Munich Museum, Germany.
To date: 192,164 Colombian specimens data-based
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News From Europe
Nigel Cleere and Robert Prys-Jones attended the 3rd European Conference
on bird collections held in Leiden, Holland. Nigel gave a talk on
BioMap: “The first two years of global cooperation between
museums”.
In the past 5 months, Nigel has visited:
• Bonn Museum (Germany) – 1,300 Colombian specimens
databased, many of them with full records - principally Trochilidae
collected by Fassl (Kleinsmidt collection) in the western and Central
Cordillera. There were also a small number of specimens received
from the Universidad del Valle in the late 1970’s. Types present
included Chalcostigma herrani tolimae and Ocreatus underwoodi incommodus.
Endemics included Coeligena prunellei (7) and Hypopyrrhus pyrohypogaster
(1).
• Genoa (Italy) – 200 specimens were located. Most were
Trochilidae from Bogotá or Colombia with no other data.
• Turin (Italy) – in one of the two major collections,
only about 300 mounted Trochildae were held, all without data. In
the main Turin museum, about 230 specimens were located. Endemics
included Pyrrhura calliptera (1).
• Milan (Italy) – about 160 Colombian specimens, with
30 specimens from K. von Sneidern, all with full data from 1955
and 1956. Endemics included Campylopterus phainopeplus (2 - H. Whitely)
and Habia gutturalis (1)
• Geneva Museum (Sw’land) – much time was spent
here since it has c.2800 modern Colombian specimens; mostly from
K. von Sneidern, with full data. A large number of specimens had
been incorrectly identified and were therefore updated. Endemics
included Atlapetes flaviceps (1), Hypopyrrhus pyrohypogaster (1),
Odontophorus hyperythrus (5), & Eriocnemis mirabilis (1).
• Bern Museum (Sw’land) – there were about 160
specimens, all from Bogotá (some modern).
• Neuchatel – (Sw’land) 260 specimens, mostly
labeled just Bogotá, although there were a few specimens
collected by O. Furhmann in 1910 from Medellín.
• Warsaw Museum (Poland) – c.400 old specimens were
located, mostly from Bogotá although a good number from Medellín
by T.K. Salmon. Types included Aglaiocercus kingi emmae (1 syntype)
and Sporophila minuta minuta (holotype of Spermophila minuta heteropygia).
Endemics included Dacnis egregia (2) and Coeligena prunellei (2).
• Paris Museum (France) – made possible with generous
EU funding (Colparsyst Programme). The museum holds c.2600 specimens.
The majority have little data, although a number are more complete
e.g. from Medellín by T.K. Salmon, Cauca by A. Pazos in the
1960’s, some exchanged material from AMNH (Santa Marta), some
Universidad del Valle specimens collected by F.C. Lehman. Many types
encountered. Endemics included Rallus semiplumbeus (4); Hypopyrrhus
pyrohypogaster (7); Coeligena prunellei (1); Odontophorus hyperythrus
(4); Habia gutturalis (4); Ramphocelus flammigerus (26); Anisognathus
melanogenys (1); Chlorochrysa nitidissima (1); Dacnis egregia (7);
Cistothoorus apolinari (2) & Pyrrhura calliptera (9 inc. type).
• Munich museum (Germany) – c.1500 specimens were inspected,
many with full data. Important collections from J. Haffer (1960’s
from Antioquia), M.G. Palmer (c.1908 in western Colombia), J.H.
Batty (1890’s in Cauca), Bardy (1912 in Cundinamarca), G.
Hopke (1890’s from Putumayo) and L.E. Orozco (1960’s
at many localities). There were also about 150 AMNH specimens. A
good selection of type and endemic specimens were found.
We would like to thank all curators, collection managers and assistants
at each European collection for their help and support.
News from Colombia
Diana Arzuza and Andrea Morales data-based 8,286 specimens at La
Salle Museum; 325 specimens at the Distrital University Museum (both
in Bogotá); 549 specimens (many of them mounted for exposition)
at the University of Antioquia collection; and 3,436 specimens (mostly
research skins) at the San José College collection (both
in Medellín).
In Manizales BioMap visited the Christ School collection (now donated
to the Los Yarumos EcoPark). Most of the specimens were collected
by the Maristas brothers and the curator Jose Lozada. 156 mounted
specimens were found from the Manizales area., with the oldest specimens
dating from the 1940’s, from Villa Marista in Popayán.
The University del Valle collection in Cali holds more than 5,000
specimens mainly from the Cauca Valley and Central and Western Andean
ranges. There were many specimens from the Chocó (Buenaventura
and Dagua), Gorgona Island and some of Caldas, Quindío and
Risaralda.
The data on all specimens in these collections was gathered and
entered into the BioMap Data Entry Tool. A copy of each collections
data was then provided to the curators. Many of these collections
had already started the process of entering their data.
Diana and Andrea also helped with the IV Field Course on Techniques
for Monitoring Terrestrial Birds by ProAves Foundation, held in
Jardín, Antioquia, including giving a presentation on bird
collections management and preliminary analyses of BioMap data.
The presentation was repeated at Antioquia University.
From November 13-17, BioMap participated in the XVI National Ornithological
Meeting held in Jardín, Antioquia. Diana and Andrea gave
a presentation on the use of collections and GIS to analyze data
from Antioquian avifauna. They also presented a poster about BioMap.
The Digital Scanning Project of key bird taxonomy books for collections
in Colombia has almost finished. The CDs will be given to all Colombian
collections and other parties that request them. Some of the vital
books scanned include the “Checklist of Birds of the World”
by Peters, “Catalogue of birds of the Americas” by Hellmayr
& Conover, “The Birds of the Republic of Colombia”
by M. de Schauensee and “The Distribution of Birdlife in Colombia”
by F. Chapman. This project has been conducted by Instituto Alexander
Von Humboldt and Project BioMap.
News From North America
Juan Carlos Verhelst has visited the collections at University of
Michigan - Ann Arbor (UMMZ), Michigan State Nat. Hist. Museum -
Lansing (MSUMNH), Cleveland Nat. Hist. Museum (CMNH), and the National
Museum of Nat. Hist. (NMNH) in Washington DC. Details:
• UMMZ holds 1362 specimens, most of them collected by C.J.
Marinkelle (454 specimens), K. Von Sneidern (278 specimens), M.C.
Carriker (184 specimens) and P. J. Darlington (105 specimens). Many
thanks to the curators R. Payne, D. Mindell and collection manager
Janet Hinshaw.
• At MSUMNH, 495 Colombian specimens, most of them collected
by M.C. Carriker (430 specimens), were data-based. Many thanks to
curators Barbara and Pam Rasmussen and collection manager Laura
Abraczinskas.
• CMNH holds 100 specimens, most of them “Bogotá
skins” including 50 hummingbirds. Specimens with more complete
data are thought to have been sent to the Carnegie Museum although
the event is not registered anywhere. Thanks to the curator Tim
Matson and assistant Roberta.
• At the National Museum of Natural History (Smithsonian),
Juan Carlos and Clara Isabel reported c.30,000 Colombian specimens,
many of them collected by M.C. Carriker and others by A. Wetmore.
Many thanks to curators Dr. Gary Graves and Dr Storrs Olson, and
collection manager: James Dean.
Sussy De La Zerda visited and data-based specimens at the University
of California in Berkeley (MVZ) and the California Academy of Sciences
in San Francisco (CAS). Sussy also started data-basing the LA County
Natural History Museum in Los Angeles (LACM).
• In Berkeley there are 3,500 Colombian bird specimens, most
of them collected by A.H. Miller. Holotypes include Tangara schrankii
anchicayae, Sporophila intermedia anchicayae, Tiaris bicolor huilae,
Coryphospingus pileatus rostratus and Chordeiles acutipennis acutipennis.
Many thanks to the curator Carla Cicero.
• The CAS collection has 85 specimens, mostly hummingbird
“Bogotá skins”. Many thanks to curator John Dumbacher,
and collection manager Douglas Long.
• At LACM, there are 5,500 specimens whose data is presently
being gathered. Many thanks to collection manager Kimball Garrett.
Other news
Sussy De La Zerda, Paul Salaman and Gary Stiles attended and presented
a talk about BioMap at the VII Neotropical Ornithological Congress
held in Chile. The talk was given in the Cooperation meeting and
although this meeting was scheduled on the last day of the congress,
many people attended and many interesting questions were asked.
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Activities to be completed over the coming months are:
• Finish databasing Colombian (UIS, Caldas, Nariño,
Pamplona, Cauca, Tolima, INCIVA) and US collections (Smithsonian,
Carnegie, Los Angeles County Museum, Western Foundation for Vertebrate
Zoology).
• Field collecting trips to gather new information.
• Data analysis to model distributions, identify and prioritize
Important Bird Areas.
• Promote and support the initiative in other taxonomic groups
and other countries.
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| BioMap Directive
Committee |
Gonzalo Andrade & Gary Stiles – Instituto
de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Robert Prys-Jones (chair) – The Natural
History Museum.
Jose Vicente Rodriguez - Conservation International
- Colombia
Alvaro Espinel - Conservation International –
Center for Applied Biodiversity Science, USA
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