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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!biosci!CUE.BC.CA!aceska
- From: aceska@CUE.BC.CA (Adolf Ceska)
- Newsgroups: bionet.plants
- Subject: BEN # 48
- Message-ID: <1388*aceska@cue.bc.ca>
- Date: 23 Jan 93 16:24:00 GMT
- Sender: daemon@net.bio.net
- Distribution: bionet
- Lines: 143
-
-
- BBBBB EEEEEE NN N ISSN 1188-603X
- BB B EE NNN N
- BBBBB EEEEE NN N N BOTANICAL
- BB B EE NN NN ELECTRONIC
- BBBBB EEEEEE NN N NEWS
-
- No. 48 January 23, 1993
-
- Address: aceska@cue.bc.ca Victoria, B.C.
- ----------------------------------------------------
-
-
- MAIL STORM
-
- I have no idea why some BEN readers received seven copies of
- BEN #47. I wish I knew what happened, but I believe it was not
- my fault. Those subscribers who reacted to the mail storm
- claim that one copy of BEN is about all they can handle.
- On the other hand, many subscribers did not get BEN # 43 and
- 44. I will try to send them again. If you have them already,
- please, delete them from your mail box. - AC
-
-
- FAIRCHILD TROPICAL GARDEN DISASTER SALE
- From: Washington Post
- .
- The Fairchild Tropical Garden sold logs and boards from 1,300
- trees downed Aug. 24, 1992 by Hurricane Andrew. Wood-turners and
- artists came from as far away as Portland, Ore., to buy exotic
- varieties seldom, if ever, seen on the market. The top price of
- $505 was paid for a 39 cm wide, 1.5 m length of Cephalanthus
- orientalis (Rubiaceae), a species from the Himalayas with
- brilliant yellow wood. Proceeds from the sale, around $31,000
- after expenses, will be used in the restorations of the gardens.
- .
- If you want to contribute to the Fairchild Restoration Fund,
- write to
-
- The Fairchild Tropical Garden
- 10901 Old Cutler Road
- Coral Gables, Florida 33156
-
-
- CHARGING FEES FOR TAXONOMIC SERVICES
- From: Association of Systematic Collections Newsletter (Aug.'92)
-
- ASC Newsletter published and article written by the late
- Dr. Henry K. Townes and submitted by Dr. Dave Wahl. Dr. Townes
- wrote:
-
- "It has been a tradition that taxonomic identifications of
- biological specimens are courtesies extended without charge."
-
- "In giving free assistance, some taxonomists are probably
- remembering their own restricted finances. But most requests now
- come from well-funded projects. The specimens sent for naming
- probably cost hundreds of dollars to collect and rear. The time
- of the project supervisor, research assistant, laboratory
- technician, [etc.] all have been paid by the project budget.
- Only the taxonomist, the one person who must have uncommon
- qualifications, would have been forgotten in the budget, and he
- is forgotten only because traditionally he does not ask to be
- paid."
-
- "As long as taxonomists find free determination work interesting
- enough, and there are enough in the profession, this system
- could continue. But that time has about passed. ... Taxonomy has
- been downgraded and underpaid for the last three decades, and
- its ratio to the rest of biological sciences has reached a low
- ebb."
-
- "Identifications for the scientific public should be on a fee
- basis. ... Income from identification fees would rarely be
- substantial, but the most valuable result would be a changed
- relation with colleagues in other fields. ... The customer also
- would be in a better position. He would be paying for the work
- and could expect a responsible job, and promptness."
-
- "When or if fees become a general practice, a research project
- involving the need for identification could be planned with more
- confidence, and executed with more efficiency. Budgeting some
- dollars for taxonomic work would give a reasonable surety that
- the work could be done promptly and by good specialists. Begging
- for free time, and uncertainty about whether or not the giver of
- free time would function properly, would become less important
- hazards."
-
-
- BIODIVERSITY & BIOLOGICAL COLLECTION GOPHER
- From: TAXACOM [abridged]
-
- The Biodiversity and Biological Collections Gopher has been
- established to provide Internet access to various types of
- systematics, biodiversity and biological collections
- information.
-
- The Gopher is located at 'huh.harvard.edu,' and can be accessed
- through any Gopher client program for DOS, OS/2, Macintosh, VMS,
- Unix computers. Access is unrestricted and available to any
- user on an Internet-connected computer.
-
- [This Gopher gives you access to many TAXACOM files, such as
- botanical electronic journal Flora Online, reports from various
- organizations, etc. The most important feature of this Gopher is
- an on-line access to GRAY HERBARIUM INDEX OF NEW WORLD PLANTS.
- You can look up any name from the Gray Index by genus and
- species, but you can also ask questions that can only be handled
- by the electronic search, such as, what species were described
- by a certain author. Many thanks to huh.harvard.edu for
- making this information freely available. - AC]
-
-
- INDEX KEWENSIS ON CD-ROM
- From: TAXACOMT <TAXACOMT@MSU.BITNET>
-
- Joseph H. Kirkbride <jkirkbride@ASRR.ARSUSDA.GOV> reported on
- TAXACOMT that in July 1992 he saw a demonstration of a beta
- version of the INDEX KEWENSIS (IK) on CD-ROM. The software is
- being developed by the same company that wrote the software for
- the Oxford English Dictionary.
-
- Oxford University Press will be selling the IK CD-ROM. The
- possible price is about US$4,000.00 for first time purchasers,
- and the yearly update will be about US$400.00.
-
- The database is an optical reading of the printed IK. Computer
- checks of the data have been made, such as verifying that the
- year has only numerical characters, but each entry has not been
- proof read. To get it out in a reasonable time frame, the
- optical reading errors have been left in, and will have to be
- corrected over time as they are reported.
-
- Two comments [AC]:
-
- 1) It would be nice to have a free on-line access to the INDEX
- KEWENSIS in the same way as we have now to the GRAY HERBARIUM
- INDEX thanks to the Biodiversity Gopher - see above.
-
- 2) I would not trust an optical reader, especially for the entry
- of the earlier volumes of the INDEX KEWENSIS. Typographical
- diversity of the old INDEX KEWENSIS volumes has to cause severe
- headaches to any optical reader regardless its artificial IQ.
-