African Plants Initiative

A specimen of Colophospermum mopane (Leguminosae) collected by John Kirk in Mozambique

The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew is a founding partner of the African Plants Initiative (API), an international partnership collaborating to produce an online database of scholarly information about African plants.  The partnership continues to grow in size, but currently includes 45 botanical institutions representing 23 countries in Africa, Europe and the US.

RBG Kew’s involvement in the project began from its inception at the Association for the Taxonomic Study of the Flora of Tropical Africa (AETFAT) conference in Ethiopia in September 2003.  Dedicated digitisation staff have been employed on the project since March 2004.  The bulk of the specimen digitisation work was completed at the end of June 2006. The initial launch of the online resource was at the XVIII AETFAT Congress held in Cameroon in February 2007.

The principal content for the database will be label data and high resolution (600ppi) images of African type specimens deposited in participating herbaria.  RBG Kew will be contributing over 70,000 putative type specimen records from our own collections, the majority of which will have been digitised courtesy of funding supplied specifically for the API project.  When completed, the collaborative database is expected to include approximately 300,000 specimen records in total.

Complementing the type specimens, the online resource will bring together additional plant information, making it possible to combine searches and access material from currently disparate collections.  Kew is contributing digitised illustrations, archive materials, botanists’ slides and texts.  The Flora of West Tropical Africa and the Useful Plants of West Tropical Africa have both been digitised for this project and Flora Zambesiaca has also been added to this resource. It has also digitised over 1,200 original illustrations from Curtis’ Botanical Magazine. A new phase of the project is currently digitising Flora of Tropical East Africa, Flora Capensis and Flora of Tropical Africa. The digitisation of Kew floras is set to continue until 2008, with the addition of three further titles. Archive materials will include, amongst others, over 9,000 sheets of Africa-related material from the Director’s Correspondence, photographs of artefacts from the Economic Botany collection, and papers from Livingstone’s Zambezi expedition.

Project Team

Project Leader: Saltmarsh, Anna

Directorate

Eimear Nic Lughadha

Herbarium

Charlotte Couch, Clare Drinkell, Don Kirkup, Patricia Malcolm-Tompkins, Sarah Phillips, Anna Saltmarsh, Daniela Zappi

ISD

Christopher Mills, Marion Crick, Gaby Fleming, Mark Jackson, Andrew McRobb, Paul Little, Graham Scrowther, John Wall, Jonathan Farley, Kelly Poultney, Jessica Warde, James Carter, Michele Losse

Project Partners and Collaborators

Austria

Naturhistorisches Museum Wien, Austria (W)

Belgium

National Botanic Garden of Belgium (BR)

Cameroon

National Herbarium of Cameroon (YA)

Ethiopia

The National Herbarium, Ethiopia (ETH)

France

Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle (P)
Herbier de l'Universite Montpellier II (MPU)

Germany

Botanic Garden & Botanical Museum, Berlin (B)
Botanische Staatsammlung Munich (M)
Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg, Frankfurt (FR)
Ludwig Maximilians Universitat, Munich (MSB)
Staatliches Museum fur Naturkunde, Stuttgart (STU)
University of Tuebingen (TUB)
University of Hohenheim (HOH)
University of Regensburg (REG)

Ghana

University of Ghana, Ghana Herbarium (GC)

Ireland

Trinity College Dublin (TCD)

Italy

Centro Studi Erbario Tropicale, Florence (FT)

Kenya

East African Herbarium, National Museums of Kenya (EA)

Madagascar

FO.FI.FA, Antananarivo (TEF)
Parc Botanique et Zoologique de Tsimbazaza (TAN)

Namibia

National Herbarium of Namibia (WIND)

Netherlands

National Herbarium of Netherlands (NHN)

Nigeria

Forest Herbarium Ibadam (FHI)

Portugal

Instituto de Investigacao Cientifica Tropical / Herbarium University of Lisbon (LISC)
Museu Nacional de Historia Natural (LISU)
University of Combria (COI)

South Africa

Bolus Herbarium, University of Cape Town (BOL)
Rhodes University, Grahamstown (RUH)
South African National Biodiversity Institute—Pretoria (PRE)
South African National Biodiversity Institute—Compton (NBG)
South African National Biodiversity Institute, KwaZulu-Natal Herbarium (NH)
University of KwaZulu-Natal Herbarium, Pietermaritzburg (NU)

Sweden

Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm (S)

Switzerland

Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Geneve (G)

Tanzania

National Herbarium of Tanzania (NHT)

Uganda

Makerere University, Botany Department (MHU)

UK

Cambridge University (CGG)
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, Scotland (E)
Natural History Museum, London (BM)

USA

New York Botanical Gardens (NYBG)
Missouri Botanical Garden  (MO)
Aluka, Princeton

Zimbabwe

National Herbarium and Botanic Garden (SRGH)

Funders

USA

Andrew W. Mellon Foundation