| Identifying plant
specimens is the most important job in botany, according to Brian Boom,
Vice President of Botanical Science and the Pfizer Curator of Botany at the New York Botanical Garden. "There's
an old Chinese proverb that goes something like, 'The beginning of knowledge
is knowing the names of things.' That's how scientists communicate," he
said.
As a professional
botanist and an amateur entomologist, Brian told us that it is much easier
to identify plants than arthropods. "There are fewer plants than arthropods,
for one thing, and they're mostly bigger. And in this part of the world,
they have been studied more thoroughly." That would not be true in the
rain forest, where Brian has worked identifying trees, but the native plants
of North America are generally well known.
All the same, there
is a discipline and a challenge involved in the identification of plant
species. "Identifying involves a comparison between a known and an unknown,
so you have to have a guide or a field manual or a key of some sort (the
known) to compare with your specimen (the unknown)," he said. Regional
field guides are available in libraries and bookstores; other sources are
local museums, botanical gardens, wildlife and conservation agencies, and
college and university departments of botany.
"Identification begins
with observation," Brian said. "You have to observe the qualities of the
unknown, but to do that accurately--so you know what to look for when you
are using a key--you need to know some plant basics: the difference between
perennial and annual plants, for example, and some general information
about plant parts--flowers, leaves, roots, seeds, and fruit."
Brian described a
typical dichotomous key for plant identification, which presents a series
of choices to narrow down the search. "Is the specimen woody or nonwoody?
If it is woody, is it a tree, a shrub, or a woody vine? If it is a tree,
is the leaf arrangement opposite or alternate? Are the leaves compound
or simple? Do the leaves have entire margins, or are they serrated? And
so on."
Brian warned that
a plant detective can make a lot of progress with this line of questioning
up to a point, "but a botanist's life starts getting difficult at
the species level, because you have to use flowers and fruit to distinguish
between species. The vegetative features (leaves, needles) of plants are
not very characteristic at higher levels of classification. There will
always be difficult specimens, especially if they are sterile," that is,
without flowers and fruits. "Fruits and flowers are what systematic botanists
use to get to the word 'go,'" he told us. "That is the basis of the whole
classification system, so if you don't have them, you have to rely on experience
or guesswork to try to find out what something is." Brian recommended asking
a local expert for help if you are stumped.
Identification
Tool Kit
The tools of identification are relatively
few and simple. The following tools are part of the field kit, which also
includes tools and equipment for specimen collection.
-
Field guide with keys to plants of the region
-
A hand lens, to examine plants at close range
-
Binoculars, to look at things high up in a
tree, for example
-
A metric ruler, to measure leaves and other
small features
-
A metric tape measure, to measure the diameter
of tree trunks
-
An altimeter, to measure the altitude of your
site
-
A compass, to determine the location of your
site
|
Brian Boom suggests wearing the lens and ruler
on strings around your neck. Another idea is to tape an actual ruler or
a photocopy of a ruler to the inside cover of your field journal.
Even experts sometimes
make mistakes when identifying plants. Brian showed us an example from
his own work, and because of the careful way he kept his records, we could
follow the history of the mistake and its correction by looking at his
field journal and specimen sheet. He collected a specimen consisting of
a twig with a few leaves in Bolivia in 1984. While still in the field,
he identified it as being a member of the Euphorbiaceae, a large family
commonly called the spurges, with more than 5,000 species. Most are tropical
plants, but the decorative poinsettia is one family member we know in North
America. "In all fairness, the plant was sterile," he said. In other
words, he had no flowers, seeds, or fruit to help him identify the plant.
"But when I got back
to the lab I was able to examine it more thoroughly without a lot of mosquitoes
buzzing in my ears, and I changed my identification to a species of Moraceae,"
a family that includes mulberries, figs, and Indian rubber trees. Then,
in 1992, the world Moraceae expert took a look at Brian's specimen and
said it belonged to a different genus of Moraceae. "At least I had it in
the right family," Brian said.
The specimen label
Brian showed us gave the full history, including the name of the person
who made each identification. Each time a correction was made, the incorrect
name was crossed out. "Never erase anything," advised Brian. "Simply cross
things out so others can trace the history. Sometimes when I've made a
real whopper of a mistake, I might scratch it out heavily, but that's
not the same as erasing," he joked.
"Seriously, though,
making mistakes is part of the process, and it's nothing to be embarrassed
about. What's important is to document everything so you can go
back and determine when the mistake occurred, which is why you never erase
anything from a field journal either."
Back to Menu
|