Biodiversity Challenge
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to enter your assessment score
Filling Critical Specimen Gaps in Madrean Pine-Oak Woodlands and Adjacent Biotic Communities in the Mogollon Highland Ecoregion Through Biodiversity Verification and Taxonomic Training
Project summary:
NHI houses an herbarium with geographic gaps in an understudied biodiversity hotspot threatened by climate change: the Madrean Pine-Oak Woodlands. The Mogollon Highlands ecoregion hosts the northernmost reaches of this biotic community which we will serve by verifying biodiversity through collection improvements and training young taxonomists through active collecting.
Lisa Floyd-Hanna
Team Members
United States
Natural History Institute - Science Director
Jennie Tutone
United States
Natural History Institute - Collections Manager and Outreach
Robert Ellis
United States
Natural History Institute - Executive Director
Referee 1:
Thomas Fleischner
Referee 2:
Elizabeth Makings
Referees
Scoring Rubric
Reviewer name:
1. Collection generation/improvement/maintenance (10 points available total)
(1a) contribution of physical and/or digital images of specimens (10 points)
or
(1b) infrastructure improvements including enhanced access to the physical collections, database development, database enhancement, digitization (10 points)
or
(1c) improvements to the physical collections (for example, better folders, better glue, paper, pest management, storage systems) (10 points)
or
(1d) distribution of duplicates (or orphan collections) to other regional or international herbaria (10 points)
2. Methods and funding consistency (10 points)
How well do the methods and funds requested match the effort needed to achieve the objectives?
3. Perceived need (10 points)
Score Small Collections Initiative applications here [30 points total]
(see below for Taxonomy and Systematics rubric)
Initiative for this application:
Taxonomic and Systematic Initiative
Reviewers should assign a score of 1 to 10 to each of the following three items (1 being poorly implemented, 10 superbly planned), plus a one-sentence comment detailing the score.
1. Originality of the proposal (10 points)
How well does the proposal advance knowledge in terms of a biodiversity perspective as well as from a taxonomic and systematic perspective?
Reviewers should assign a score of 1 to 10 to each of the following three items (1 being poorly implemented, 10 superbly planned), plus a one-sentence comment detailing the score.
Score Taxonomy and Systematics applications here [50 points total]
(see above for Small Collections Initiative rubric)
2. Training (10 points available total)
(2a) Training of staff and students (10 points)
or
(2b) Outreach and/or community activities (10 points)
This proposal scores:
/10
This proposal scores:
/10
This proposal scores:
/10
This proposal scores:
/10
This proposal scores:
/10
This proposal scores:
/10
5. Training (10 points total)
(5a) Training of staff and students (10 points)
or
(5b) Outreach and/or community activities (10 points)
4. Qualification of the team (10 points)
Based on reference letters and CVs
3. Perceived need (10 points total)
(3a) Demonstrated need and discussion of threat and/or understudied taxa (10 points)
or
(3b) Vanishing taxonomic expertise (10 points)
This proposal scores:
/10
This proposal scores:
/10
Gymnosperms, Flowering plants
Cost: $
10000

