Mapping Historical Data: Recovering a Forgotten Floristic and Vegetation Database for Biodiversity Monitoring

Multitemporal biodiversity data on a forest ecosystem can provide useful information about the evolution of biodiversity in a territory. The present study describes the recovery of an archive used to determine the main Schmid’s vegetation belts in Trento Province, Italy. The archive covers 20 years,...

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Main Authors: Francesco Geri, Nicola La Porta, Fabio Zottele, Marco Ciolli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-06-01
Series:ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
Subjects:
GIS
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/5/7/100
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spelling doaj-afc09c9ccee24872bfaa4603aac6ff342020-11-24T22:54:25ZengMDPI AGISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information2220-99642016-06-015710010.3390/ijgi5070100ijgi5070100Mapping Historical Data: Recovering a Forgotten Floristic and Vegetation Database for Biodiversity MonitoringFrancesco Geri0Nicola La Porta1Fabio Zottele2Marco Ciolli3Department of Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering, University of Trento, Trento 38123, ItalyIASMA Research and Innovation Centre, Edmund Mach Foundation (FEM), San Michele a/Adige (Trento) 38010, ItalyTechnology Transfer Centre, Edmund Mach Foundation (FEM), San Michele a/Adige, Trento 38010, ItalyDepartment of Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering, University of Trento, Trento 38123, ItalyMultitemporal biodiversity data on a forest ecosystem can provide useful information about the evolution of biodiversity in a territory. The present study describes the recovery of an archive used to determine the main Schmid’s vegetation belts in Trento Province, Italy. The archive covers 20 years, from the 1970s to the 1990s. During the FORCING project (an Italian acronym for Cingoli Forestali, i.e., forest belts), a comprehensive process of database recovering was executed, and missing data were digitized from historical maps, preserving paper-based maps and documents. All of the maps of 16 forest districts, and the related 8000 detected transects, have been georeferenced to make the whole database spatially explicit and to evaluate the possibility of performing comparative samplings on up-to-date datasets. The floristic raw data (approximately 200,000 specific identifications, including frequency indices) still retain an important and irreplaceable information value. The data can now be browsed via a web-GIS. We provide here a set of examples of the use of this type of data, and we highlight the potential and the limits of the specific dataset and of the historical database, in general.http://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/5/7/100forestGISweb-GISspeciesfloradiversity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesco Geri
Nicola La Porta
Fabio Zottele
Marco Ciolli
spellingShingle Francesco Geri
Nicola La Porta
Fabio Zottele
Marco Ciolli
Mapping Historical Data: Recovering a Forgotten Floristic and Vegetation Database for Biodiversity Monitoring
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
forest
GIS
web-GIS
species
flora
diversity
author_facet Francesco Geri
Nicola La Porta
Fabio Zottele
Marco Ciolli
author_sort Francesco Geri
title Mapping Historical Data: Recovering a Forgotten Floristic and Vegetation Database for Biodiversity Monitoring
title_short Mapping Historical Data: Recovering a Forgotten Floristic and Vegetation Database for Biodiversity Monitoring
title_full Mapping Historical Data: Recovering a Forgotten Floristic and Vegetation Database for Biodiversity Monitoring
title_fullStr Mapping Historical Data: Recovering a Forgotten Floristic and Vegetation Database for Biodiversity Monitoring
title_full_unstemmed Mapping Historical Data: Recovering a Forgotten Floristic and Vegetation Database for Biodiversity Monitoring
title_sort mapping historical data: recovering a forgotten floristic and vegetation database for biodiversity monitoring
publisher MDPI AG
series ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
issn 2220-9964
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Multitemporal biodiversity data on a forest ecosystem can provide useful information about the evolution of biodiversity in a territory. The present study describes the recovery of an archive used to determine the main Schmid’s vegetation belts in Trento Province, Italy. The archive covers 20 years, from the 1970s to the 1990s. During the FORCING project (an Italian acronym for Cingoli Forestali, i.e., forest belts), a comprehensive process of database recovering was executed, and missing data were digitized from historical maps, preserving paper-based maps and documents. All of the maps of 16 forest districts, and the related 8000 detected transects, have been georeferenced to make the whole database spatially explicit and to evaluate the possibility of performing comparative samplings on up-to-date datasets. The floristic raw data (approximately 200,000 specific identifications, including frequency indices) still retain an important and irreplaceable information value. The data can now be browsed via a web-GIS. We provide here a set of examples of the use of this type of data, and we highlight the potential and the limits of the specific dataset and of the historical database, in general.
topic forest
GIS
web-GIS
species
flora
diversity
url http://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/5/7/100
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AT fabiozottele mappinghistoricaldatarecoveringaforgottenfloristicandvegetationdatabaseforbiodiversitymonitoring
AT marcociolli mappinghistoricaldatarecoveringaforgottenfloristicandvegetationdatabaseforbiodiversitymonitoring
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